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WSWS
: History
In memory of Vadim Z. Rogovin
By David North
15 December 1998
The International Committee of the Fourth International held meetings
in Berlin, on December 5, and London, on December 12, to commemorate the
life of Vadim Z. Rogovin, the distinguished Russian Marxist historian and
sociologist. Rogovin, who died on September 18 in Moscow at the age of 61,
was the author of a six-volume history of the socialist opposition to Stalinism
in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Communist International.
David North, the chairman of the editorial board of the World Socialist
Web Site, addressed the memorial meetings in Berlin and London. The following
is the text of his remarks.
A PDF version is available for readers who wish
to print this speech.
Nearly three months have passed since Vadim Zakharovich
Rogovin died during the early morning hours of September 18, 1998. The reaction
of those who knew him well was a sense of deep personal loss. Though we
had known for more than four years that he was suffering from terminal cancer,
it had never been possible to reconcile oneself to the inevitable outcome
of this disease. Vadim's physical and intellectual vitality had nurtured
our hopes that he would prevail against all the odds. Again and again, with
the completion of yet another book or the delivery of a lecture, we had
witnessed Vadim refute the pessimistic prognoses of his doctors. He seemed
able, through sheer force of intellectual willpower, to hold the cancer
at bay.
At the beginning of this year, Vadim had traveled to Australia to participate
in an international symposium, organized by the International Committee
of the Fourth International, on the subject of Fundamental Problems of
Marxism in the Twentieth Century. When he arrived after a trip of more
than 24 hours, we were all frightened by his appearance. The results of
the latest medical tests made for the most depressing reading. Indeed, according
to the test reports, Vadim had not the slightest right to be standing before
us. Had it been wise, we asked ourselves, to request of him that he undertake
such a demanding assignment? Vadim seemed to take no notice of our anxiety.
He was anxious to begin discussions on the theme of his lecture, Where
Is Russia Going? A Sociological Analysis and Historical Prognosis. As
we had seen so often during the previous four years, the ensuing discussion
had upon Vadim an extraordinary therapeutic effect. Within 48 hours of his
arrival Vadim's appearance was transformed. It seemed as if the cancer had
retreated beneath the pressure of the energy field created by his intellectual
concentration. On the sixth of January, at 10 in the morning, he mounted
the podium. For the next two hours, with hardly a glance at the notes he
had prepared, Vadim elaborated upon the ideas which formed the basis of
his lecture. He then fielded questions for another hour. In the afternoon,
following the lunch break, he returned to find numerous written questions
from an audience whose interest had been so aroused by his lecture. For
more than two hours Vadim replied to these queries. It was not until late
in the afternoon that he had completed his work. The audience responded
with a prolonged and emotional ovation, a tribute not only to the intellectual
virtuosity that it had just witnessed but also to the integrity and strength
of character embodied in the life work of the lecturer.
At that moment, it seemed not unreasonable to hope that Vadim would continue
to defy medical science and continue his work for at least several years
more. But that lecture was his last major public statement. He still succeeded
in completing and overseeing the publication of the sixth volume of his
cycle on the history of Stalinism and the struggle against it. But by the
late spring, following a trip by Vadim and his wife, Galya, to Israel, the
disease entered its final stages. He lost the effective use of his left
arm, and then his ability to walk. But the functioning of his remarkable
mind remained completely unimpaired, and he continued to work, until the
very last hours of his life, on the seventh volume of his history.
One does not meet a man like Vadim more than once in one's life. Indeed,
to have known such a human being, let alone to have counted him among one's
friends, was an immense privilege. Vadim Rogovin will never be forgotten.
Those of us who knew Vadim personally and those who will learn about him
through the study of his writings will for decades reflect on the significance
of his life. What is being said this afternoon can only be a preliminary
appreciation of Vadim's contribution to the scientific understanding of
the fate of the socialist movement in the twentieth century.
In May 1997, on the occasion of Vadim's sixtieth birthday, I described
him as a prophet of historical truth. At that time, I had in mind the place
of Vadim in the intellectual life of post-Soviet Russia--specifically the
challenge posed by his writings to the foul political, intellectual and
moral environment in post-Soviet Russia produced by decades of lying about
the past.
But that definition of Vadim as a prophet of historical truth is no less
apt in defining his role beyond the borders of the former USSR. It is difficult
to think of another historian whose work stands in such irreconcilable opposition
to the smug and reactionary subjectivism and relativism of post-modernism
as that of Vadim Rogovin. Nothing was more repugnant to Vadim than the cynical
view, so fashionable in the universities of Western Europe and the United
States, that there is no place in the study and writing of history for any
concept of objective truth. Vadim saw nothing that was original in this
outlook, which has long been favored by reactionary thinkers. After all,
more than a century has passed since Nietzsche asserted, "The falseness
of an opinion is not for us any objection to it," that the validity
of an opinion is merely a function of its operational utility for any given
purpose. Vadim insisted that the contrast between opinion and truth is of
a fundamental character. Opinion, he wrote, "is a category of social
psychology, a characteristic trait of ordinary consciousness. Truth is a
category of science and scientific world outlook, constituting a view of
the future based on an honest and objective analysis of the past and present."
Vadim's pursuit of objective historical truth constituted the essential
foundation and purpose of his intellectual life. The problem of objective
truth was, for Vadim, not that of an abstract theoretical standard that
was arbitrarily imposed upon the subject of historical research. It was,
rather, intrinsic to the subject itself. For Vadim, that subject was the
history of the political struggles within the Soviet Communist Party and
the Communist International between 1922, one year before the founding of
the Left Opposition, and 1940, the year of the assassination of Leon Trotsky
by an agent of Stalin's NKVD. His overriding intellectual task and moral
responsibility was to extract the objective truth of this critical historical
period from beneath the vast edifice of lies that had been erected by Stalin
and his successors, who were--even before the term was invented--the foremost
practitioners of post-modernist historiography. If, as post-modernist theoreticians
insist, there exists no necessary relationship between history and a scientifically-verifiable
objective truth--and, to continue, if historical narratives are merely imagined
and invented--then the accounts of Soviet history given by Andrei Vyshinsky
at the three Moscow trials are as legitimate as any other. The various versions
of Soviet history presented in different editions of officially authorized
encyclopedias are, within this intellectually-debased framework, not to
be rejected as lies; rather, they are to be rationalized and justified as
alternative "imaginings" of the past. The apologists of post-modernism
might argue that this is not their intention; but ideas have a logic of
their own.
Vadim Rogovin understood that the Soviet tragedy was embedded in the
disorientation and deadening of historical consciousness. The political
immaturity and bewilderment that characterized the response of the Soviet
people to the events of the 1980s and 1990s, their inability to find a progressive
response to the crisis in their society, was, above all, the outcome of
decades of historical falsifications. It was impossible to understand the
present without real knowledge of the past. To the extent that the Russian
working class believed that Stalinism was the inevitable product of socialism,
and that the tragic course of Soviet history flowed inexorably from the
revolution of October 1917, it was politically disarmed and could see no
alternative to the dismantling of the Soviet Union and the restoration of
capitalism. The great question posed by Vadim Rogovin--Was there an alternative
to Stalinism?--is, certainly, fundamental to an understanding of the history
of the Soviet Union. But the ramifications of this question extend far beyond
the borders of the former USSR, and they are of critical relevance not only
to our understanding of the past but to our vision of the future. Within
the context of his examination of the Soviet past Vadim Rogovin grappled
with the essential experiences and lessons of the twentieth century. That
is why the works of Vadim Zakharovich Rogovin are of world importance.
Throughout his professional career Vadim displayed an amazing fluency
as a writer. As a sociologist, he listed more than 250 scholarly papers
on his curriculum vitae. But even this impressive output pales before
what he accomplished during the last seven years of his life, during which
he completed six volumes (each of which consisted of no less than 350 printed
pages) and was close to three-quarters through the seventh. Beneath a haze
of cigarette smoke, words seemed to flow effortlessly from Vadim's pen.
Writer's block was one affliction he never knew. But even the most fluent
of writers could not have produced works on the scale of his six completed
historical volumes--so extensively researched and profoundly reasoned--unless
they were the outcome of years of intellectual preparation. Indeed, long
before he had committed his work to paper, vast sections of it had already
taken shape within his brain. Vadim's historical cycle was the product of
a lifetime of research and thought.
Moreover, a critical element of Vadim's intellectual fecundity was rooted
in the depth of his personal identification with the ideals and spirit of
the revolutionary movement whose tragic destiny was the subject of his historical
work. Herein lay a crucial distinction between Vadim and the vast majority
of Western European and American academics active in the field of Russian
and Soviet studies. The latter are, with very few exceptions, unable to
understand, let alone sympathize with, the aims and motivations of the revolutionaries.
Such historians, projecting upon the past their own cynicism and apathy,
exhibit an almost painful inability to comprehend an historical period whose
greatest representatives were motivated by revolutionary ideals for which
they were prepared to sacrifice their lives. Vadim was different: he not
only empathized with the heroic leaders of the Left Opposition, he shared
their aims and ideals. This was not a matter of external affectation. Rather,
Vadim--in the force of his personality and the intensity of his thought--recalled
a social type which had once played so important a role in Russian and world
history, but which had been all but destroyed by Stalinism--the Russian
revolutionary intelligentsia. When I think about Vadim, I cannot help but
recall the very fine portrait of the ethos of this unusual social phenomenon
given by Isaiah Berlin: "Every Russian writer was made conscious that
he was on a public stage, testifying; so that the smallest lapse on his
part, a lie, a deception, an act of self-indulgence, lack of zeal for the
truth, was a heinous crime.... [I]f you spoke in public at all, be it as
a poet or novelist or historian or in whatever public capacity, then you
accepted full responsibility for guiding and leading the people. If this
was your calling then you were bound by a Hippocratic oath to tell the truth
and never betray it, and to dedicate yourself selflessly to your goal."
[1]
Vadim was born in 1937, the year that witnessed the annihilation of the
finest representatives of the revolutionary tradition, program and culture
upon which the achievements of the Soviet Union during the first two decades
of its existence had been based. Anyone who had played a leading role in
the victory of the October Revolution and the formation of the Soviet Union,
or who had demonstrated, in any sphere of Soviet life, the capacity for
independent and critical thought, was a candidate for the executioner's
bullet. Stalin's purges were the means through which the bureaucracy consolidated
its usurpation of political power. But that definition of the terror, however
politically precise, does not by itself adequately express the social and
cultural implications of the nightmarish events of 1937. All that was reactionary
and backward in Russian society enjoyed, in the orgy of mass murder instigated
by Stalin, its revenge against the revolution.
Among the hundreds of thousands of Stalin's victims was Vadim's maternal
grandfather, Aleksandr Semenovich Tager. He was not a revolutionary, but
rather a liberal representative of the most progressive sections of the
old Russian democratic intelligentsia. A distinguished jurist, Tager served
as a defense attorney at the 1922 trial of the Social-Revolutionary leaders
who stood accused of organizing terrorist actions against the Bolshevik
regime. There were several outstanding contrasts between the trial of the
Social Revolutionaries and those organized a decade and a half later by
Stalin. First, the Social Revolutionary defendants, unrepentant opponents
of the Soviet government, were not compelled to renounce their political
convictions nor to heap obloquy upon themselves. Second, they were able
to mount, in the presence of international observers (including the leader
of the Second International, Vandervelde), a genuine political and legal
defense on their own behalf. Aleksandr Tager conducted himself as a representative
of the legal interests of his clients, not as a secondary instrument of
the state prosecution.
In fact, an event that occurred during the trial demonstrated Tager's
courage. A workers demonstration had been organized by the government in
support of the trial. A group of demonstrators burst into the courtroom
to disrupt the proceedings and demand the death of the defendants. Yuri
Piatakov, one of the most important Bolshevik leaders, was presiding over
the trial. He told the demonstrators that the court would take their wishes
into consideration. Tager and several other defense attorneys vehemently
protested against this violation of proper legal procedures and walked out
of the courtroom. At the end of the trial, the sentence of death was pronounced
against several of the defendants. But it was suspended on the condition
that the Social Revolutionary Party halt its terrorist campaign against
the government. In the aftermath of the trial, Tager was punished for his
defiance by being sent into exile. But within a few months he was recalled
to Moscow and there were no further actions taken against him. Indeed, Tager
was permitted to travel abroad quite regularly with his wife, who needed
special medical treatment that could not be obtained in Russia. This was
not all that unusual prior to the onset of the terror. Vadim's grandfather
enjoyed the respect and friendship of such well-known political figures
as Anatoly Lunacharsky. In the early 1930s Tager published an authoritative
study of the infamous case of Mendel Beilis, a Jew who had been the victim
of a frame-up organized by the pre-revolutionary tsarist regime, involving
preposterous allegations of ritual murder. The preface to this volume was
written by Lunacharsky, who urged that it be published in as many European
languages as possible to counter the growing menace of anti-Semitism. In
1938, though he had never been associated with any anti-Stalinist political
tendency, Tager was arrested along with other prominent jurists. In an example
of one of the bitter ironies of that dreadful period, Tager had been invited
only six months before his arrest by none other than Andrei Vizhinsky, the
chief procurator of the Soviet Union, to join his legal institute. Thus,
when the secret police came to arrest Vadim's grandfather, he reassured
his wife that it was all a mistake and that she should immediately contact
Vizhinsky, who would certainly secure his prompt release. Vadim's grandmother
never saw her husband again; and more than a decade passed before she learned
definitively of his execution.
Vadim cherished the memory of his grandfather, and was pleased when a
new edition of Tager's study of the Beilis case was reissued in Russia.
One can imagine the impact of the trauma of Aleksandr Tager's arrest, disappearance
and death upon his family. It was from his grandmother that Vadim first
learned of the horrors of the purges, and it is reasonable to assume that
the tragic experience of his family profoundly influenced his intellectual
development. Vadim told me that his first conscious misgivings about the
nature of the Stalinist regime occurred when he was nearly 13 years old.
Amidst the frenzied celebrations of Stalin's seventieth birthday, Vadim
found himself wondering why virtually all the other Old Bolshevik leaders
had come to an untimely end long before reaching that milestone. Vadim asked
his father why most of Lenin's colleagues had been shot in the 1930s. How
was it possible that so many leaders of the revolution turned out to be
"Enemies of the People"? His father's attempts to fob his son
off with hollow and unconvincing references to "anti-Party" activities
were unsuccessful. Disturbed and probably frightened by the inquiries, Vadim's
father offered what was, at that time, considered to be the ultimate answer
from which there could be no further appeal: "Don't you think Stalin
understands this better than you?" Vadim remained unconvinced. He continued
to wonder why so many revolutionary leaders, and even his own grandfather,
had been shot. Then, quite suddenly, he was seized by a terrible thought
that he knew, instinctively, provided the answer to his questions: "Stalin
must be a criminal!" Vadim continued to argue with his family. As he
matured he realized that the Soviet Union was not a just society. He saw
poverty and noted the presence of sharp contrasts in the social conditions
of different strata of the Moscow population. Vadim also knew that there
were prison camps: people who lived in his apartment building were arrested
during the anti-Cosmopolitan campaign that was unleashed by Stalin in 1952-53.
Thus, upon hearing of Stalin's death in March 1953, Vadim's reaction, as
he later recalled, was that this event was cause for joy and celebration.
The change in the political and social climate of the Soviet Union in
the aftermath of Stalin's death was, undoubtedly, the most important factor
in the intellectual development of the young Vadim Rogovin. He was nearly
19 at the time of the Twentieth Congress of the CPSU. When the content of
Nikita Khrushchev's "secret speech" became known--in which Stalin's
crimes were denounced for the first time--Vadim was not particularly surprised
by the revelations. There were important new facts made available, but,
for the most part, Vadim felt that the revelations vindicated his hatred
of Stalin. However, Vadim was not satisfied with Khrushchev's attempt to
explain Stalin's crimes as mere excesses produced by the "cult of personality,"
let alone by Khrushchev's insistence that Stalin's political line--above
all, in the fight against the Trotskyist opposition of the 1920s--was fundamentally
correct.
When Vadim became a student at Moscow University, where he majored in
aesthetics, it required little effort on his part to complete his course
assignments and receive high grades. Rather than attend lectures, he spent
as much time as possible at the historical library of the university where
he studied old issues of Pravda and other journals that cast light
upon the political struggles of the 1920s. As Vadim took detailed notes
on the old inner-party debates, he became convinced of the correctness of
Trotsky's position and was drawn inexorably to the conclusion that Trotsky
was the greatest figure in Soviet history. In a discussion I had with Vadim
during the weekend we celebrated his sixtieth birthday he confided that
all the basic conceptions that were to appear in his historical cycle were
initially formed in the course of the readings he pursued when he was in
his twenties. From then on, Vadim told me, he dreamed of a time when it
would become possible to tell the Soviet people the truth about their history.
But the political conditions that prevailed in the USSR--even during
the celebrated "thaw" of the late 1950s and early 1960s--were
not conducive to the production of serious works of history. During the
initial stages of his academic career Vadim's principal area of research
was aesthetics. He pursued his historical research in private. Vadim was
able to discuss the merits of the policies advanced by Trotsky and the Left
Opposition only with his most trusted colleagues and friends, and even then
only with extreme caution. Even though criticism of the regime had become
increasingly common, any mention of Trotsky's name still aroused suspicion
and fear. The father of a friend of Vadim was a well-known journalist who
had casually remarked, among a small group of dissidents, that Trotsky had
been a great orator. The journalist expressed no further opinion on Trotsky's
political positions. But that casual remark came to the attention of the
KGB: the journalist was promptly fired from his position and his family
was reduced to poverty. On one occasion Vadim took into his confidence a
well-known theater director whom he respected. Vadim expressed to him his
admiration for Trotsky's views on art. The director was shaken. "Why
are you speaking to me so openly?" the director asked. Vadim explained
that he did not believe that the director, who was both a personal friend
and a man of integrity, would inform on him. The director assured him that
he would not, but explained that he might himself face unpleasant consequences
if his young friend's opinions were to come to the attention of the authorities.
There was another factor, aside from fear, that contributed to Vadim's
sense of isolation. The dissident movement that emerged in the mid-1960s
exhibited little interest in a socialist critique of the bureaucratic regime.
It criticized Stalinism not from the left (i.e., on the basis of a socialist
program), but from the right (i.e., appealing for political support from
the American bourgeoisie). Within this milieu the revolutionary program
of Trotsky was anathema.
Despite his love of literature and art, Vadim was anxious to find a field
of research that related more directly to his historical and political interests.
Fortunately, the regime began to relax its previous strictures on the development
of sociological research, if only because the needs of bureaucratic policy-making
required more profound insights into the structure and problems of so complex
a society as the Soviet Union. So Vadim began his official studies anew
and became a sociologist. Without openly acknowledging this fact, he derived
from the program of the Left Opposition the central theme of his academic
research: the problem of social inequality in the Soviet Union. Vadim used
his sociological research to expose the gap between socialist ideals and
the Soviet reality, and to advocate the development of egalitarian policies.
In a listing of Vadim's writings one finds such titles as "Youth and
Social Progress," "Social Policy in Developed Socialist Society:
Directions, Tendencies, Problems," "Social Guarantees and Problems
of Perfecting Relations of Distribution," "Economic Effectiveness
and Social Justice," "Social Justice and the Paths of Its Realization
in Social Policy," "Social Aspects of Distribution Policy,"
"Social Aspects of Accelerating the Resolution of the Housing Problem"
and "The Dialectic of Social Equality and Inequality at the Contemporary
Stage of the Development of Soviet Society."
The crisis of the USSR became apparent during the years of Brezhnev's
rule--known as the "Era of Stagnation." For Vadim this was a period
of deep frustration. His earlier hopes that socialist principles would be
revived within the USSR seemed less and less realistic. The earlier "thaw"
had once again given way to a new "freeze." State pressure was
applied to suppress critical examinations of Stalin's historical role. Everything
Vadim wrote was subjected by the censors to the literary equivalent of a
strip search. Some articles never saw the light of day; many were published
only after sections were deleted or substantially edited. However, during
the last period of the "Era of Stagnation," Vadim enjoyed an unexpected
stroke of luck. Normally, the censors discussed the articles they reviewed
only with the publishers and editors of the journals and newspapers to which
the works had been submitted. As a matter of course the authors were neither
contacted nor consulted. They were expected to submit to whatever decision
was made. However, a senior official in the censorship department found
himself intrigued by Vadim's work. He decided to contact the author directly.
Never had he read articles that tackled the problem of social inequality
with such insight, clarity and audacity. Why, he wondered, did Vadim occupy
himself so persistently with this theme? Why did he believe that social
equality was attainable? Was it consistent with human nature? Like a character
in an existential drama, Vadim found himself engaged in a lengthy philosophical
discourse with the very official who had the power to consign his writings
to the flames. His fate hung in the balance. But the censor--whose conscience
had not been entirely extinguished by years of bureaucratic routine--was
moved by the force of Vadim's arguments. He promised to do whatever he could
to ensure the publication of his articles.
With the accession of Gorbachev to power and the introduction of glasnost,
the audience for Vadim's writings grew immensely. Taking advantage of the
new opportunities, Vadim wrote a series of articles for Komsomolskaya
Pravda in 1985 that attacked the prevalence of social privilege in both
its open and concealed forms, demanded sharp limitations on income inequality,
and called for a substantial improvement in the living standards of the
broad masses. Vadim's censor expressed apprehension, but permitted the articles
to be published as written. Komsomolskaya Pravda had a circulation
of 20 million, and the articles provoked an impassioned response. They were
widely interpreted as an attack on the social position of the ruling bureaucracy.
Over the next few months thousands of letters were addressed to Komsomolskaya
Pravda praising and denouncing the articles.
At first Vadim was encouraged by the political change ushered in by Gorbachev's
rise to power. Not only had it become possible to address social problems
more boldly and before a much larger audience, Vadim was now able to speak
openly, for the first time, about Leon Trotsky and the political struggle
that had been waged by the Left Opposition against the rise of Stalinism.
Another critical development was the sudden availability of volumes of Trotsky's
writings, especially from the 1930s, that Vadim had never seen before. He
obtained for the first time a set of the Bulletin of the Opposition,
the most important Russian-language publication of the international Trotskyist
movement. Vadim absorbed and assimilated these writings, which reaffirmed
and deepened his Trotskyist convictions. For Vadim, these writings possessed
not only an historical but also an exceptional contemporary significance;
for it soon became apparent that no segment of either the political or intellectual
elite had any serious understanding of the nature of the crisis confronting
the Soviet Union. With each announcement of a new "historically-necessary"
change of policy, the frenzied improvisations of Gorbachev assumed an increasingly
absurd character. Beyond touring the world in search of adulation, the General
Secretary had not the slightest idea about what he should do. The confusion
of Gorbachev was mirrored in the disorientation of the entire Soviet intelligentsia.
It seemed as if nothing in their previous work had prepared them for the
breakdown of the USSR in the late 1980s.
Vadim was convinced that the problems of the Soviet Union could neither
be understood nor solved without an exhaustive review of its history. The
essential requirement of such a review was the cleansing of the historical
record of all the accumulated lies about Leon Trotsky. The possibility of
a renewal of Soviet society along socialist lines depended upon an honest
examination of the Trotskyist critique of Stalinism and the alternative
program advanced by the Left Opposition. As the political and economic situation
deteriorated in the USSR, the case for a review of Trotsky's work seemed,
to Vadim, irresistible. But Vadim now encountered a political and social
phenomenon that left him, once again, isolated: the stampede of virtually
the entire intelligentsia to the right. Vadim had long been aware of the
development of right-wing tendencies among the intelligentsia. The dissident
movement had never appealed to him because of its orientation to international
bourgeois public opinion and hostility to Marxism. However, at least in
the academic and intellectual circles within which he moved, criticism of
official Soviet policy had been couched in socialist terms. But as the 1980s
drew to a close, his friends and professional associates--with very few
exceptions--were professing unbounded admiration for, and faith in, the
capitalist system. They were indifferent to arguments based on facts and
reason. One by one, Vadim found himself compelled to sever relations with
friends and colleagues. Among them was Stanislav Shatalin. He had been one
of Vadim's closest associates with whom he had once co-authored an article.
But Shatalin became one of Gorbachev's economic advisers and achieved international
renown as the author of the "500 Day Plan," which advocated the
use of "shock therapy" methods to reorganize the Soviet economy
on the basis of the capitalist market.
A byproduct of this swing to the right was the development of a new campaign
in the media aimed at discrediting the idea that Trotskyism represented
an alternative to Stalinism. The media shamelessly combined the worst Stalinist-era
slanders against Trotsky with the reactionary arguments of Western Sovietologists.
This campaign against Trotsky--which, in essence, was directed against the
entire heritage of Marxian socialism--found a wide response among the decomposing
ex-Soviet and Russian intelligentsia. The most important--or perhaps it
would be more appropriate to say best known--product of this campaign was
the series of books written by General Dmitri Volkogonov.
It was within this reactionary environment that Vadim embarked upon the
intellectual project to which he devoted the rest of his life: the writing
of a Marxist history of the political conflicts within the Communist Party
and Communist International. This was a task of which no other historian
in the former Soviet Union, let alone beyond its borders, was capable. Why
was this so? "Great history is written," E.H. Carr once said,
"precisely when the historian's vision of the past is illuminated by
insights into the problems of the present." [2] This observation provides us with the key to understanding
Vadim's achievement as an historian. Certainly, Vadim brought to his work
certain exceptional faculties: an encyclopedic knowledge of Soviet history,
an astonishing grasp of a vast complex of facts, an unerring ability to
situate events within a broader political and social context, and a lucid
and unaffected style of writing. But beyond these strengths he possessed
yet another inestimable advantage: a profound awareness that the present
crisis of not only Russia, but also the entire world, is the legacy of the
defeats suffered by the international socialist movement in the 1920s and
1930s as a consequence of the betrayals and crimes of the Stalinist bureaucracy.
Yet there is not a trace of pessimism in Vadim's cycle. The events that
he narrates and analyzes, especially in those volumes that deal directly
with the preparation and execution of the Stalinist terror of 1936-39, are
certainly dreadful. They make for reading that cannot be described as anything
other than harrowing. But amidst all the horror, Rogovin presents the Soviet
tragedy as a drama whose final act is still to be written. As he writes
in the preface to his third volume: "The historical process opened
up by the October Revolution has not been completed, but merely stopped."
What imparts to Vadim's work its moral intensity is not only the author's
indignation, but above all his conviction that Stalinism represented only
a temporary derailment of the cause of world socialism. Notwithstanding
the defeat it suffered in the 1930s, the Trotskyist movement embodied the
possibility that the Soviet Union might have developed along a very different
and far more progressive path. And that very possibility refutes all claims
that Stalinism was the necessary and inevitable outcome of Bolshevism. The
indisputable fact that there was an alternative to Stalinism means that
the historical potential of socialism has not been exhausted.
Rogovin's conception of history is essentially dynamic. Underlying his
insistence on the undiminished significance of the events of the 1930s is
Vadim's conception of historical time as a unified and interacting continuum
of past, present and future. Grappling with the great problems of his own
age, Vadim looked into the past not only to foresee the future but also
to shape it. Perhaps the truest expression of the role to which Vadim aspired
is to be found in the verse of Pasternak, with which he opened the fourth
volume of his cycle: Once Upon a time, unintentionally, / And probably
hazarding a guess, / Hegel called the historian a prophet / Predicting in
reverse.
Another critical element of Vadim's historical cycle is its interpretation
of the conflict between the Stalinist regime and the Left Opposition as
a clash of two irreconcilable social principles--those of equality and inequality.
The social essence of the political program of the Trotskyist opposition,
giving voice to the interests of the working class, was the struggle for
equality. The objective that found expression in the policies of the Stalinist
regime--drawing support from the bureaucracy and various intermediate social
strata--was inequality. The striving for social privilege--the achievement
of material benefits for the few at the expense of the many--found its necessarily
brutal forms of political expression in the bestialities of the Stalinist
regime. The murdering dictator epitomized the essential social outlook of
the bureaucracy: "Stalin's greed for material things, his craving for
limitless luxury in his everyday life were passed on to his descendants
up to and including Gorbachev, all of whom, unlike the Bolshevik Old Guard,
were unwilling to share physical difficulties and privations with the people."
[3]
Vadim's analysis of the social foundation of Stalinism informed his analysis
of the eventual breakdown of the USSR. He would often argue that the process
of capitalist restoration was rooted in reactionary, anti-egalitarian policies
pursued by Stalin from the 1930s until his death. Vadim noted that the hostility
of the professional and intellectual elite to the Soviet regime began as
a reaction to the limited efforts of Stalin's successors to lower the degree
of social inequality that the late dictator had encouraged. The nomenclatura
resented the social concessions to the working class that the Soviet bureaucracy
felt compelled to make after Stalin's death. The dissident movement, Vadim
insisted, developed out of these resentments and, in this sense, was actually
a product of Stalinism rather than an opposition to it.
His defense of Marxist principles condemned Vadim to almost complete
isolation in the aftermath of the collapse of the USSR in December 1991.
The spectacle of political reaction, social regression and moral depravity
filled Vadim with revulsion. That which he considered essential for creative
intellectual work--the consistent exchange of ideas with trusted colleagues
and friends--had become all but impossible by 1992. There had been virtually
no one with whom he was able to discuss the content of the first volume
of his historical cycle, and he had managed to secure its publication only
with the greatest difficulty.
It was precisely at this point that Vadim Rogovin established contact
with the International Committee of the Fourth International. The relationship
that developed over the next six years affected us no less profoundly than
it did him. In the late 1980s, before he met with the ICFI, Vadim had held
discussions with left-wing tendencies from outside the Soviet Union who
described themselves as Trotskyists. He was anxious to learn more about
the perspective and program of the Fourth International. Vadim met with
the leader of the Pabloite movement, Ernest Mandel. But his discussions
with Mandel left Vadim with a keen sense of disappointment. When Vadim asked
Mandel to analyze the situation in the Soviet Union, he expected to hear
an incisive critique of the policies of the Kremlin bureaucracy. Instead,
Mandel was effusive in his praise of Gorbachev and expressed high hopes
for the development of perestroika. He seemed genuinely surprised to discover
that Vadim did not share his admiration for the first secretary of the CPSU.
The impression left by Mandel upon Vadim was that of a sedate "bourgeoisnii
professor."
A fortunate turn of events brought Vadim into contact with the ICFI.
In 1992-93, Fred Choate, my good friend and a supporter of the International
Committee, was in Moscow researching the life of Aleksandr Voronsky, one
of the major figures in the Left Opposition. Fred came across a journal
that included a short article about Trotsky's views on literature. Fred
was impressed by the article's objective tone and the honesty with which
it summarized the positions of Trotsky. It was unusual to read an article
about Trotsky in a Soviet journal that was not marred by heavy-handed irony
and/or misrepresentations. The author was Vadim Rogovin. Fred decided to
contact Rogovin. He found his telephone number, called him and made an appointment.
Their meeting went very well. Vadim was delighted to conduct a serious discussion
on the subject of the Left Opposition. However Fred did not immediately
tell Vadim that he was personally associated with the Trotskyist movement.
Then fate intervened. Sometime earlier, Vadim had come across a copy
of the Russian-language publication produced by the International Committee,
the Bulletin of the Fourth International. He and his wife, Galya,
had studied the contents carefully and decided that the Bulletin
was an authentic Trotskyist publication. It was Galya who, with her usual
perspicacity, told Vadim that he should find some way to contact ... David
North! But how was this to be done? Vadim raised the question with Fred.
Had he, Vadim asked, ever heard of North, and did Fred have any idea how
he might contact this person? Fred indicated to Vadim that he thought he
could be of some assistance.
While Vadim had been looking for us, the International Committee had
been looking for him. Between 1989 and 1991 I traveled on several occasions
to the Soviet Union and met with numerous academicians. It had been my hope
that somewhere, in the vast academic community, one would find a scholar
who appreciated the need, amidst the collapse of the Soviet Union, to expose
the crimes committed by Stalinism against the socialist movement, and, moreover,
to write about the struggle waged by Trotsky and the Left Opposition against
the bureaucracy's growth and consolidation of power in the 1920s and 1930s.
The search had not been successful. One after another, the historians and
sociologists with whom I spoke revealed themselves to be small-minded cynics,
neither interested in, nor capable of, serious work. The climate of political
reaction had overwhelmed whatever principles and ideals they might once
have believed in. They seemed to hold Marxism responsible for every problem
they encountered, both in society and their own lives. They saw in the reorganization
of Russia on the basis of capitalism a veritable panacea.
I recall a discussion in the autumn of 1991 with a well-known Soviet
scholar who held a high position at the Historical-Archival Institute in
Moscow. Two years earlier this same man had placed at my disposal the main
auditorium of the institute, where I gave a lecture on the struggle of Trotsky
against Stalin. But since that time he had surrendered to the pressure of
reaction and absolutely nothing was left of his earlier socialistic leanings.
He was firmly of the opinion that the establishment of a market economy
would quickly solve all of Russia's problems. I argued with him, explaining
that the unfettered subordination of Russia to the world capitalist economy
would set it back by 100 years. "That," he replied laconically,
"would represent a vast improvement over what we have today."
From people with views such as these one could not expect any positive response
to proposals for an objective study of the Trotskyist opposition to the
Stalinist regime. The social and political outlook that they had adopted
did not permit them to admit that Stalinism represented a grotesque perversion
of the principles of the October Revolution, and that a genuine and viable
socialist alternative to the policies pursued by the Soviet bureaucracy
had been advanced by the Left Opposition.
In March 1992, despite the apathy and opposition it had encountered among
the demoralized remnants of the Soviet intelligentsia, the International
Committee embarked upon a campaign in defense of historical truth: to expose
the falsifications, betrayals and crimes of Stalinism; and to establish,
on the basis of the historical record, the irreconcilable opposition of
Marxism, embodied in the heroic struggle of Trotsky and the Left Opposition,
to Stalinism. On March 11, 1992, in the opening report to the Twelfth Plenum
of the ICFI, it was stated: "To answer the lie that Stalinism is Marxism
requires that we expose the deeds of Stalinism. To know what Stalinism is
one has to show whom Stalinism murdered. We have to answer the question:
against what enemy did Stalinism strike its most terrible blows? The greatest
political task of our movement must be to restore historical truth by exposing
the far-reaching political significance of the crimes which Stalinism carried
out. At the very center of this exposure must be the opening of the record
of the Moscow Trials, the purges and the assassination of Trotsky.... When
we speak of a campaign to uncover the historical truth, we see this as a
task that benefits not only the working class in the narrow sense, but all
of progressive humanity. What happened in the Lubianka is the concern of
all of struggling mankind. Exposing the crimes of Stalinism is an essential
part of overcoming the damage they caused to the development of social and
political thought." [4]
For most of Vadim's life it had not been possible for him to discuss
openly his Trotskyist convictions, let alone participate in the work of
the Fourth International. Similarly, our movement had for decades upheld
the legacy of Trotsky's struggle, without the possibility of establishing
contact with genuine Marxists within the Soviet Union. Yet, despite the
formidable obstacles that were the product of unfavorable historical conditions,
the trajectories of Vadim Rogovin and the Fourth International had finally,
after separate voyages of more than a half-century, merged into the same
orbital path.
Discussions between Vadim and the International Committee began in the
late spring of 1992. Initially, most of our exchanges took place through
the new medium of e-mail. With Fred serving as our interlocutor, we exchanged,
though in a somewhat restricted manner, ideas and proposals for the development
of literary and political work. In October 1992, Vadim met briefly with
Comrade Peter Schwarz during a short visit to Berlin. In February 1993,
during a seminar in Kiev on the history of the International Committee,
Vadim and I met for the first time. The discussions that we held over that
weekend established a pattern that persisted during the years to come: We
talked, debated, argued, disagreed, agreed, laughed, and made plans. In
the course of further meetings held in Moscow in 1993 and early 1994, we
discussed in detail the development of Vadim's historical cycle. As I have
already said, the basic outline of the work had been developed by Vadim
over many years of study and thought. And yet, as a consequence of his discussions
with the International Committee, the intellectual and political scope of
this work broadened immensely. Even after the initial discussions, Vadim
decided that it was necessary for him to recast and rewrite his first volume.
I do not mean to suggest that Vadim owed his ideas to the International
Committee. The dialectical movement of his thought cannot be understood
in such terms. Rather, Vadim's creativity was stimulated by discussion,
which activated his imagination and aroused within his consciousness new
ideas. At first, Vadim had believed that his project would require four
volumes. The impact of his collaboration with the International Committee
found its most direct expression in the fact that the scale of the project
grew to seven volumes.
Vadim's work will, for decades to come, dominate historical literature
on the subject of the Stalinist terror. A work of such monumental dimensions
defies any attempt at cursory summation. But this must be emphasized: what
sets Vadim's work apart from virtually all others is his insistence that
the principal purpose and function of the terror was the elimination of
the Trotskyist opposition to the Stalinist regime. Given the fact that the
Stalinist regime continually insisted that the purpose of the terror was
the elimination of Trotskyism, the ordinary reader--unacquainted with the
standard works on the terror produced by Western historians--might wonder
why I consider precisely this aspect of Vadim's thesis to be essential and
exceptional. The answer is that much of Western historiography on the subject
of the purges has been devoted to minimizing, if not denying, the centrality
of the struggle against Trotsky and his ideas. As Vadim noted, the work
by Robert Conquest--which, for more than 30 years, has been the best known
in the field--devotes only a few pages to the subject of Trotskyism. Though
not, perhaps, in so crude a form, many historians--even those who pursue
their work honestly and conscientiously (and there are such people)--maintain
that the terror was about almost anything in the world except the struggle
against the influence of Trotsky. After all, they argue, Trotsky had been
exiled from the Soviet Union in 1929. The most well-known members of the
old Left Opposition had recanted their earlier Trotskyist views. Systematic
repression had made impossible the development of political work among whatever
remnants of Trotskyist groups may have still existed by the mid-1930s.
Vadim rejected these views which, he argued, underestimated the potency
of the Marxist tradition within the Soviet Union and the depth of revolutionary
sentiments among broad segments of the people. Moreover, despite their recantations,
the Old Bolsheviks had never reconciled themselves to the Stalinist regime
and remained potential focal points of pent-up mass dissatisfaction. Even
within the bureaucracy, there remained elements who had not broken completely
with their own revolutionary past and upon whose loyalty Stalin could not
entirely depend. Trotsky's writings were followed and still exerted influence.
After his assassination in December 1934, several volumes of Trotsky's writings
were found in Kirov's apartment. Vadim analyzed the links between oppositionist
currents within the USSR and Trotsky. The purges were not the product of
a madman's paranoia. Stalin, Vadim insisted, had real reason to fear the
influence of Trotsky, not only within the Soviet Union but beyond its borders.
What then, was the ultimate purpose of the terror? "The Great Purge
of 1937-1938," wrote Vadim, "was needed by Stalin precisely because
only in this way was it possible to rob of vitality the strengthening revolutionary
movement of the Fourth International, to prevent it from turning into the
leading revolutionary force of the epoch, to disorient and demoralize world
public opinion, capable otherwise of becoming receptive to the adoption
of 'Trotskyist' ideas."
Early in 1994 the second volume of Vadim's cycle was published. A press
run of 10,000 copies had been ordered, and--as there was no other place
where they could be stored--all the books were delivered to Vadim's apartment.
Bundles of books, wrapped in brown paper, were everywhere--on shelves, table
tops, in closets, beneath beds and chairs, and on top of the refrigerator.
Vadim was delighted with the arrival of his "newborn," and was
already hard at work on the third volume. In addition to the support of
the International Committee, the release of previously closed documents
from state archives gave a powerful impulse to his research and writing.
Never in Vadim's life, as he freely admitted, had he been so happy. At long
last, he was able to accomplish all that of which in the past he had only
been able to dream. Then came the unexpected. In May 1994, after Vadim had
complained of pain in his lower abdomen, his physicians ordered a computer
tomogram, which detected a growth in Vadims large intestines. An operation
was undertaken, and a large tumor was removed from his colon. The surgeon
also discovered two metastases in Vadim's liver, which he attempted to deal
with by performing a resection. The prognosis was devastating: a rapid physical
decline was to be expected. It was unlikely that Vadim would survive more
than one year.
Vadim received the news with extraordinary calm. "I see nothing,"
he said, "that is particularly tragic in my personal fate." One
could not but admire Vadim's stoic response, but we all felt that there
was, in this unexpected and terrible development, something profoundly tragic,
in an almost classical sense. At the very moment when objective conditions
finally permitted Vadim to fulfill his life's ambition, he was struck with
a relentless and incurable disease. In the fall of 1994, when Vadim had
recovered sufficiently from his operation, I visited him in Moscow. He had
resumed work on the third volume, which he hoped to complete within a few
months. As always, the first order of business was the drawing up of an
agenda for our discussions. The most important item was "Plans for
the Future." We talked about the impact of the new campaign of falsifications
that had been unleashed by the publication of books by Professor Richard
Pipes and General Dmitri Volkogonov. Was it not time, I suggested to Vadim,
for the International Committee to launch an "International Counter-Offensive
Against the Post-Soviet School of Historical Falsification"? Vadim
immediately repeated the title in Russian, which made it sound even more
grandiose and imposing. It appealed to him immensely. I asked Vadim if he
would be prepared to undertake a lecture tour to the United States during
the early spring of 1995. Vadim greeted the proposal with enthusiasm. At
that moment I had no idea whether Vadim would be alive in the spring. But
the prospect of lecturing abroad had a therapeutic effect upon Vadim greater
than any treatment known to medical science. As his spirit soared, Vadim's
capacity for work seemed fully restored. He rapidly completed the third
volume and threw himself into the preparation of his American lectures.
The first lecture was to take place at Michigan State University in Lansing;
the second at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Further talks were
scheduled in Palo Alto and Boston. Our party organized a campaign to build
the lectures the likes of which had not been seen on a college campus in
the United States for at least the last 20 years. We advertised the lectures
as "a major intellectual event"--something that struck the students
as so strange, unusual and welcome that it quickly generated a great deal
of interest and excitement among them. It was with trepidation that we awaited
the arrival of Vadim and Galya. Several months had passed since my visit
to Moscow. I wondered whether his health was up to the rigors of travel
and a demanding series of lectures. But my concerns were soon set to rest.
Vadim's mood was nothing less than euphoric and his physical condition seemed
robust. His interest in every facet of American life was inexhaustible.
As we were soon to discover, we had on our hands one of the most formidable
sightseers since Marco Polo. Between discussions on his upcoming lectures,
Vadim insisted on seeing as much of Detroit and its environs as possible.
His interest in sociology was not merely that of a theoretician. Vadim possessed
acute powers of observation, and was fascinated by the variety, anomalies
and contradictions of the United States. Vadim wanted to sample and savor
as much as possible of American life--and I mean that literally. On a trip
to a mall, Vadim noticed an ice cream parlor. He strode in and was amazed
by the variety of flavors. He ordered a sundae with three scoops of ice
cream. The attendant behind the counter pointed to the vast array of toppings,
and asked Vadim which he would like on his ice cream? "All of them,"
he replied.
The lectures were a triumph. At Michigan State University, nearly 150
students, faculty and administrators were in attendance. At the University
of Michigan, the attendance was close to 250. Vadim had the gift of presenting
complex ideas in a manner which made them accessible and interesting to
a diverse audience. Vadim placed great value on his interaction with the
audience. He enjoyed questions more than anything else, because they allowed
him to gauge the audience's response, to clarify elements of his presentation
and develop new ideas that had not previously occurred to him.
At the conclusion of the tour of the United States we agreed that a further
series of lectures would be organized in other parts of the world. In February
1996 Vadim lectured in England and Scotland. In May-June 1996, Vadim delivered
lectures in Australia before standing room only audiences whose size shocked--and,
it often seemed, dismayed--the history faculties of the universities at
which the meetings were held. The four lectures given by Vadim--two in Sydney
and two in Melbourne--attracted a turnout of nearly 2,000 people. In December
1996 Vadim traveled to Germany to deliver a lecture in Berlin, at the Humboldt
University, and in Bochum.
Vadim was pleased with the success of his lectures. But he derived his
greatest satisfaction from meeting the comrades of the International Committee.
The depth of his isolation in Russia made him all the more grateful to be
with friends and genuine comrades. Vadim found among them a sense of idealism
and solidarity that was impossible within the bureaucratized organizations
that he had known in the USSR. Meeting and working with Trotskyists from
all over the world was, for Vadim and Galya, not only a political and intellectual
experience, but a deeply emotional one. Invariably, as the day of their
return to Moscow drew closer, the mood of Vadim and Galya would grow darker.
They would seek to retain their composure by showering gifts upon their
hosts. Then, when they arrived at the airport and time came to say their
last goodbyes, there were always embraces and tears.
Life in Moscow was not easy for Vadim. While the trips abroad seemed
to work wonders upon his health and morale, the returns to Moscow often
were followed by a physical and emotional relapse. Given the nature of Vadim's
illness, long and exhausting sessions of chemotherapy were unavoidable.
But they were made still more difficult by the isolation that Vadim felt
within Russia. Little remained of his old circle of friends and colleagues.
Many of them had simply adapted to the new environment by shedding their
past beliefs and principles. With such people Vadim refused to maintain
any personal contact. Then there were other friends, less adaptable, who
felt that their lives had lost all purpose in the utterly debased conditions
of post-Soviet life. Vadim and Galya did what they could to support and
encourage such friends. Once Vadim invited an old friend to dinner. He wanted
me to meet her and discuss the work and perspective of our movement. She
listened in silence, barely uttering a word. What few observations she made
expressed the deepest pessimism and demoralization. When the woman left
Vadim explained: "She was once perhaps the most honest and respected
journalist in the Soviet Union. Her articles on social problems and conditions
of everyday life were read by millions of people. She received thousands
of letters every week. Then her newspaper closed down and she could not
find another job. Her audience no longer exists, and she sees no reason
to live. I know many people like her."
In order to maintain his own emotional equilibrium, Vadim attempted--to
the extent that this was possible--to maintain a certain detachment from
daily political developments. As Avner Zis, the brilliant Soviet aestheticist
who remained one of Vadim's few close friends, once noted: "We watch
the news on television and see only two types of people--idiots and gangsters."
Vadim tried as best he could to concentrate on his historical work. But
the depth of the intellectual, social and moral degradation profoundly affected
him. Though he understood the counterrevolutionary nature of Stalinism,
Vadim found it difficult to accept--emotionally, if not intellectually--that
there had not emerged from the Communist Party, an organization with 40
million members, at least several dozen, if not a few thousand, genuine
Marxists.
On the weekend of Vadim's sixtieth birthday, the Communist Party called
an anti-Yeltsin demonstration that coincided with the forty-second anniversary
of the defeat of Nazi Germany. Though he despised Zyuganov, Vadim hoped
that the date of the demonstration would somehow evoke residual socialist
sentiments among the Moscow population. "At least we shall see some
red flags," Vadim said, urging me to accompany him to observe the demonstration.
I was glad to walk with Vadim, but warned him not to get his hopes up. The
demonstration sickened Vadim: there were a few red flags, but even more
posters bearing the image of Stalin. There were also swastikas and anti-Semitic
leaflets being widely circulated. The demonstration came to a halt before
the Lubianka, and Zyuganov addressed the demonstrators from the steps of
the old secret police headquarters within which--60 years before--thousands
of Old Bolsheviks had been tortured and shot. As Vadim left the scene, he
gave voice to all his grief and frustration. "Now you have seen for
yourself what has become of our society," he said again and again.
As we walked through the streets of Moscow I attempted to counteract Vadim's
depression. The demonstration did not represent the entire Russian reality,
I argued. Other influences were at work, including his own writings. Vadim
was not willing to be consoled. "Nothing I write will make any difference
in this country," he insisted. We came across a small kiosk with a
few tables and chairs set up beside it. We purchased some sodas and sat
down to drink them. The argument continued. Suddenly we noticed a man observing
us. As we wondered who he was, he came up to Vadim and said quietly: "I
know who you are. Please accept my gratitude for what you have written.
You have many friends." As we completed our journey home, Vadim's mood
was euphoric.
Such shifts in mood were not unusual for Vadim. He was a complex and
multifaceted man--as much an artist as a scientist. The richness of his
thought flowed from a rare blend of logic and emotion. Vadim possessed an
awesome capacity to absorb, analyze and assimilate information. Part of
the secret of the speed with which he wrote was that he retained much of
what he read--archival documents, books, and articles from journals--and
did not need to spend a great deal of time making, studying and reorganizing
notes. But however great a claim historical facts and sociological statistics
made upon his memory, there was still plenty of room for poetry. He recited
with ease the verses of Pushkin, Mayakovsky, Pasternak and other Russian-Soviet
masters. The beauty and passion of his recitations were not merely the work
of memory. Vadim both understood and felt the images to which he gave voice
with such sensitivity.
When Vadim left Australia this past January, he was full of hope. At
the conclusion of his lecture, I had presented Vadim with the newly-published
English-language translation of 1937. In accepting the book, Vadim
acknowledged before the audience that the last six years had been the happiest
of his life. He wished, moreover, to share a secret with the audience. The
seventh and last volume of his historical cycle would be dedicated to the
International Committee of the Fourth International, without whose support
and encouragement his work would not have been possible. For the next few
months Vadim seemed to be holding his own physically. In May, he and Galya
traveled to Israel to visit a daughter. Upon his return, Vadim suddenly
found it difficult to move his left arm. His doctors assured him that he
had suffered only a small stroke, and that there was no reason to be alarmed.
In August, however, the weakness extended to his legs. Vadim entered the
Institute of Oncological Sciences for tests and treatment.
Though Vadim assured me over the telephone that his condition was stable
and that doctors expected an improvement, I feared the worst and decided
to visit him in September. I arrived in Moscow on September 11, amidst the
growing chaos of the financial crisis that had, during the previous week,
produced the collapse of the ruble. I went immediately to the hospital.
Twenty years before it had been, no doubt, a showcase of Soviet scientific
achievements. Now it seemed a symbol of the social catastrophe that had
overtaken Russia. The vast structure was cold and dark. On that Friday evening,
medical personnel were nowhere to be found. Vadim's room was on the eighteenth
floor. All the medical stations were deserted. Only an elderly cleaning
woman, bent over a mop, was to be seen. Searching through the darkened halls,
I found Vadim's room and entered. He was sitting at a small desk, writing.
His appearance had greatly changed. Galya was living with Vadim in the hospital
room, taking upon herself all the essential functions that the hospital--devastated
by the social crisis--was unable to provide. She prepared Vadim's food,
changed the sheets on his bed, checked his blood pressure and sugar levels,
administered medications, and washed him.
As it was already late and Vadim was very tired, we agreed to begin our
discussion the next day. But when I arrived on Saturday morning, Vadim's
condition had suddenly deteriorated drastically. He was gasping for air,
and seemed to be only semiconscious. I left the room in search of a physician.
I was able to find his oncologist, Professor Litchnitzer, who had supervised
Vadims treatment since the operation. He now told me that the cancer
had progressed to Vadim's brain. At the present moment, Vadim was passing
through a serious crisis. There was little he could do except administer
oxygen to help Vadim's breathing. But Professor Litchnitzer then suggested
that I should try to speak to Vadim. I went back to the room, sat down beside
Vadim's bed and did as Litchnitzer suggested. Vadim opened his eyes. His
breathing became less labored. Within an hour the crisis seemed to have
passed. Vadim sat up in his bed. He asked how long I would be in Moscow.
I told him my schedule. " Nu, tak," Vadim replied. "Let
us prepare an agenda for our discussions." First, he wanted to review
with me the material that he was including in his seventh volume, especially
that relating to the assassination of Trotsky. Then, Vadim said, he intended
to dictate a letter to Professor Herman Weber in Germany, who had edited
a collection of essays on the Stalinist terror, one of which had included
a dismissive reference to Rogovin's work. According to Weber's book, Rogovin's
analysis of the terror placed too much emphasis on Trotsky's influence.
Finally, Vadim wanted to discuss how the sections of the International Committee
intended to incorporate, in programmatic form, the concept of social equality.
Little more than an hour before, it had appeared possible that Vadim might
die that very day. Now he had proposed an agenda that would require several
days to complete.
We spent the rest of Saturday reviewing, as he had suggested, material
for the seventh volume. On Sunday, Vadim dictated a brilliantly argued letter
to Professor Weber, refuting the criticism that had been leveled against
his own work. On Monday, we spoke and, as was usual for us, argued about
the meaning of the demand for social equality within contemporary society.
By early evening, Vadim had tired and we decided to bring our discussion
to a conclusion. He was immensely satisfied with the results of our work.
Would it be possible, he asked, for me to return to Moscow in November?
I promised that I would. On the next day, Tuesday, I left Russia. After
stopping for one day in Western Europe, I flew back to the United States
on Thursday. By the time I arrived in Detroit it was already past midnight,
Friday morning, in Moscow. Fifteen minutes after I entered my home I received
the message from Moscow. Vadim had just died.
Vadim's funeral was held on the outskirts of Moscow on September 21.
The Russian media had taken no notice of his death. It was a relatively
small group of people that was on hand to pay tribute to this extraordinary
man. But those who were there represented all that was great and principled
in the history of the Soviet Union: Yuri Primakov, the son of General Vitali
Primakov, murdered by Stalin in 1937; Yuri Smirnov, the son of the Left
Oppositionist Vladimir Smirnov, murdered by Stalin in 1936; Zoya Serebriakova,
the daughter of the Left Oppositionist Leonid Serebriakov, murdered by Stalin
in 1937; and Valeri Bronstein, the grandnephew of Lev Davidovich Bronstein,
known better as Trotsky. These survivors and witnesses of events that are
among the most terrible of the twentieth century were able to appreciate
the significance of the life of Vadim Zakharovich Rogovin. In the future
many more, in Russia and throughout the world, will read Vadim's books and
honor his memory. For the great historian has himself passed into history.
Notes
1. Russian Thinkers (London: Penguin Books, 1979),
p. 129.
2. What Is History? (London: Penguin, 1990), p. 37.
3. Stalin's Neo-NEP (Unpublished translation)
4. Fourth International, Volume 19, Number 1, Fall-Winter
1992, pp. 77-78.
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