WHAT IS TO BE DONE?by V. I. Lenin |
Correction to What Is To Be Done? The Initiators’ Group of whom I speak in the pamphlet What Is To Be Done? p.
141, have asked me to make the following correction to my description
of the part they played in the attempt to reconcile the
Social-Democratic organisations abroad: “Of the three members of this
group, only one left the Union Abroad at the end of 1900; the others
left in 1901, only after becoming convinced that it was impossible to
obtain the Union’s consent to a conference with the Iskra organisation
abroad and the revolutionary Sotsial-Demokrat organisation, which the
Initiators’ Group had proposed. The Administrative Committee of the
Union Abroad at first rejected this proposal, contending that the
persons comprising the Initiators’ Group were ‘not competent’ to act as
mediators, and it expressed the desire to enter into direct contact
with the Iskra organisation abroad. Soon thereafter, however, the
Administrative Committee of the Union Abroad informed the Initiators’
Group that following the appearance of the first number of Iskra
containing the report of the split in the Union, it had altered its
decision and no longer desired to maintain relations with Iskra. After
this, how can one explain the statement made by a member of the
Administrative Committee of the Union Abroad that the latter’s
rejection of a conference was called forth entirely by its
dissatisfaction with the composition of the Initiators’ Group? It is
true that it is equally difficult to explain why the Administrative
Committee of the Union Abroad agreed to a conference in June of last
year, still remained in force and Iskra’s ‘negative’ attitude to the
Union Abroad was still more strongly expressed in the first issue of
Zarya, and in No. 4 of Iskra, both of which appeared prior to the June
Conference.” N. Lenin Iskra, No. 19, April 1, 1902 |
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