Vignettes of Life in the Worker’s Paradise
Socialism and Communism seem to be cool,once again, among our young, who never experienced what it's like when you live under the thumb of a commissar who decides what you get and when, Of course, none of the younger generation would know what a sigh of relief came over the world when the Soviet Union disbanded and communism disappeared, with the exceptions of Cuba and North Korea. China had already begun on the path of a mixed state controlled and free enterprise economy, and North Vietnam, which had fought bitterly against the United States to impose communism on South Vietnam, was also hurrying to abandon the machinery, if not the veneer.
Here, excerpted from my book, Courage of the Spirit, is a description of life under the thougthful gaze of the Party.
(http://www.google.com/imgres?q=marx+and+engels&hl=en&biw=1401&bih=690&tbm=isch&tbnid=ny6D_VMWlBfa0M:&imgrefurl=http://www.ottawalife.com/2012/07/moriartys-musings-my-russian-symphony/karl-marx-friedrich-engels-vladimir-lenin-joseph-stalin/&docid=uOzEEol8x3cz9M&imgurl=http://www.ottawalife.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Karl-Marx-Friedrich-Engels-Vladimir-Lenin-Joseph-Stalin.jpg&w=1024&h=768&ei=Zje_UaGhIcSxyQGA54HYDQ&zoom=1&ved=1t:3588,r:7,s:0,i:112&iact=rc&page=1&tbnh=169&tbnw=214&start=0&ndsp=12&tx=83&ty=84)
An
great American journalist, Lincoln Steffens, visited with Lenin at the outset
of the Soviet Revolution. Highly impressed by what he saw, he returned to the
United States and famously declared:” I have seen the future and it works!”
My
father and uncle spent several years in the future and made every effort possible
to get back to the present.
The
Soviet system had as its goal the shaping of the new Soviet man, an altruistic
individual who would give his all for the common good, as attributed to Marx:”
From each according to his ability; to each according to his needs. “
Marxism-Leninism,or Communism, would embody the goals of ancient preachers and
idealists, the Utopia, free of the burdens of religious superstition and the
restrictions of bourgeois society; all would own equally, private property
would be abolished. Ultimately, in this ideal situation, Marx’s partner Engels
predicted, the State itself would be superfluous and wither away. There would
only be a very short “ dictatorship of the proletariat” for the transition.
In this ideal world, as George Orwell’s
Napoleon the Pig declared,” All animals are equal—but some are more equal than
others”.
The
idea of collective ownership produced dismal results. As my father explained,
when all own everything, everyone owns nothing, and no one takes responsibility
for anything and the Soviet economy lagged far behind the economies of America
and Europe.
The
“temporary dictatorship” lasted some 70 years, only to be replaced by a
government of wealthy oligarchs and a flat ( or “regressive”) tax system
In
some sense, both Communism and Nazism shared policies of terror and the
overwhelming force of state and party machinery to create a new society. To the
credit of communism, it must be said that the frenzy of terror was in pursuit
of the noblest goals of human ideals, whereas for Nazism, the goals were the outright
elevation of one race overall others and the annihilation of the Jews as the
greatest obstacle to that victory.
Years
later, when the American Jewish community agitated on behalf of Soviet Jewry,
under the slogan, ”Let my people Go,” there were some voices calling the Soviet
oppression of Jewish religion a second Holocaust. This hurt my father deeply.
For all the flaws of the Soviets, all the rest of European Jewry would have
been dead had the Soviets not crushed the German forces at Stalingrad and then
rolled on to Berlin. He also told me that the Soviets could not possibly let
Jews leave the Iron Curtain—because after the Jews, then the Satellite states
like Poland and Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Republics such as the Ukraine and
Kazakhstan and all the rest would clamor to leave. No system willingly commits
suicide. Indeed, while some Jews were allowed to leave in the 1970’s, by 1980
the exit doors were shut again. Only
with glasnost and perestroika under Mikhail Gorbachov did the
gates open again. As my father said would happen, the whole house of cards came
tumbling down.
On
Jewish life
What of Jewish life inside the Soviet Union. Stalin
himself had published a statement:
“ In the U.S.S.R. anti-semitism is punishable with the
utmost severity of the law as a phenomenon deeply hostile to the Soviet system.
Under U.S.S.R. law ,active anti-semites are liable to the death penalty.J. Stalin ( Pravda, No. 329, November 30, 1936)
The Jews
were a recognized nationality, and Yiddish a recognized language, and there was
even an attempt at establishing a Jewish autonomous region, Birobidzhan ( far
away to the extreme eastern end of Russia ).
It is no
wonder that the Jews of Russia believed that the Revolution opened up new hope.
After all, under the Tsar, there was a common policy, attributed to Supreme
Prosecutor of the Holy Synod, Konstantin Pobedonetsov,” One third will die, one
third will leave the country, and one third will be assimilated within the
Russian people.”
Within a few years after the Revolution, those
Jews in key positions of leadership , such as Trotsky ,Zinoviev and Kaminev,
would be ousted and executed, while the regime did all it could to suppress
Jewish religious and cultural identification. Lenin had already expressed the
future policy towards Jews in the first year of the Revolution: “Jews and city dwellers of the Ukraine must be taken by
hedgehog-skin gauntlets, sent to fight on front lines and
should never be allowed in any administrative positions.”
My father tried to find out what
the prognosis for Jewish identity was. He had rented a room with a Jewish
family and in a very private
conversation one day, asked the father of the household what it was like
to be a Jew in the Soviet Union. The man’s son was seated in the room and upon
hearing the question immediately clapped his ears on his head , shouted,” I
refuse to hear anything of this discussion” and stormed out. That one act
defined for my father the future for Jews in the Soviet Union. If anything,
both the host and my father were lucky, as youngsters were encouraged to betray
reactionary statements or deeds of their parents.
(Typical cartoon published in post-Stalin
USSR showing a Jew bowing to a Nazi boot.)
http://www.google.com/imgres?q=anti+semitism+in+soviet+union&hl=en&biw=1401&bih=646&tbm=isch&tbnid=4BHvrvpC9mMCnM:&imgrefurl=http://www.soviet-empire.com/ussr/viewtopic.php%3Ff%3D107%26t%3D52305&docid=qltfN5VyZxkGBM&imgurl=http://www.geschichteinchronologie.ch/judentum-aktenlage/antisem/d/EncJud_anti-semitism-band3-kolonne150-karikatur-jude-m-nazistiefel.jpg&w=645&h=590&ei=9zi_Ueb4AaeqyAG4wIHgCw&zoom=1&ved=1t:3588,r:25,s:0,i:166&iact=rc&page=2&tbnh=180&tbnw=216&start=22&ndsp=27&tx=88&ty=94
Don’t walk where
you shouldn’t and volunteer gladly
My father was still naïve at the beginning of his exile in the
Soviet Union. One fine day, the weather was good, so he went out for a walk, a
saw a lovely park. He walked around, enjoyed the trees and the greenery, and
suddenly, found himself surrounded by guards and hauled off to prison. After
Berlin and Brno, he had had his full of prison.
Unbeknownst to him, he had stumbled upon a local headquarters for
the NKVD, “EnKaViDa”, the People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs, the
governmental agency responsible for executing enemies of the people and carting
others off to the Soviet Gulag .( Later, it was replaced by the KGB, where
current Russian leader Putin received his training).
My father underwent a full day of intensive interrogation. Who are
you? Where are you from? What are you looking for? A German speaker with Czech
passport seemed highly suspicious to them but eventually they let him go,
unharmed. Very fortunate for my father!
NKVD
Chief Lavrenty Beria
http://russiapedia.rt.com/files/prominent-russians/politics-and-society/lavrentiy-beria/lavrentiy-beria_3-t.jpg
He learned that when leaders ask for volunteers that is understood
to be an order. One day, all loyal comrades were asked to volunteer to help in
the war effort by volunteering in the local salt mine. My father gladly
volunteered to shovel salt, as that was the best of all options.
The
very last thing you would want in this
system was to raise suspicion. My father at one time smoked heavily and when
the first warning notices came out about cancer I asked him how he started.
“Before
I came to the Soviet Union, I never smoked. However, we were doing well and
were invited to many social gatherings with party and government officials.
They would offer food, but Russian food was much to heavy and fatty ( and pork
laden) for me to stomach. Then they would offer me a glass of vodka, but I had
no stomach for liquor Then they offered
me their cigarettes. Now, these cigarettes contain the strongest and harshest
tobacco in the world and they had a long filter to smoke them through, that’s
how strong the tobacco was. I realized
that they were looking at as if I were some anti-social criminal, an enemy of
the people, so I picked up the cigarette and puffed away That’s how I learned, finally, how to smoke.”
( My father quit in his 60’s, but suffered circulatory problems that later
proved fatal—perhaps that was the price he paid for his Russian smoking habit).
Belmorkanal, the popular cigarette of the
period
http://rsmilit.narod.ru/p0000002.jpg
Being a Chemist in the
Soviet Union
My
father was enamored of American detergents—“I am amazed—I have no idea what
materials and processes these engineers have that can produce such wonderful
cleansers!”
When I
was about seven or eight, my father would take me into the kitchen, take a pot,
some flour and water, mix it, cook it, and , behold, I would have a very fine
glue for gluing my school projects together This, my father explained, is how
you make things work when you don’t have the right supplies and the right
tools. That, he explained, is how he learned to succeed in the factories in
Stalin’s worker’s paradise.
His
Russian was very limited. One day, he walked into his supervisor with a sample
of a product he had just prepared. He asked the supervisor for his opinion. “
Nichevo”, “Nothing” was the response.
My
father turned around, tweaked the ingredients, and came back for the
supervisors opinion. Again,”Nichevo”-“Nothing”!
And
again, my father, feeling worried, turned around, tweaked the ingredients and
came back again. And again, “ Nichevo”!Nothing.
My
father was flabbergasted.”What is wrong? I don’t understand! I have come back,
each time with a better product, and you still don’t like it!”.
What
do you mean, ”Don’t like it? I told you “Nichevo”- there’s nothing wrong—go
ahead and make it!
Nichevo,
ничего, ( the “g” souns like a “v” to add to the confusion) is an old Russian
phrase ,still in use, that means” Don’t worry. The result is much better than
expected.”!
One
day, his factory received instructions to make soap and a quota of the number
and size of the bars to produce. Keep in mind that the Soviet economy was a
top-down system, marked by central planning and 5-Year Plans ( that never
worked). However, the raw materials needed were scarce, and there was only
enough to produce half the quantity of soap that was ordered. What to do?
Failure was not an option.
My
father gave instructions to charge the ratio of chemicals and water in the
process, so that the requisite quantity could be produced. Unfortunately for
the would be bather, the soap was incredibly soft and crumbled in the hands (
it was mostly water). He therefore printed instructions to go along with the
soap: Before using, place the soap in a warm location, such as a moderate oven,
for a certain amount of time” .The excess water would evaporate and the result
would be a much shrunken but useable bar of soap.
How
did the accounting for these 5-Year economic plans work. An order would go out
for production, my father described, for 10,000 blankets. However, there was
enough raw material for only 2000 blankets. The problem was solved by creative
accounting. Factory A would weave the cloth and announce that it had processed
2000 blankets. Factory B would cut the blankets to size and announce that it
had processed 2000 blankets. Factory C would stitch the blankets for another
2000 , factory D would fold them for another 2000, and factory E would ship out
the finished 2000 blankets. Thus 5 factories processed 2000 blankets each, for
a total of 10,000 blankets processed, thereby all met the goal and brought
glory and pride to the workers and the Chairman of the Party.
Not
one stone could be turned over without the approval of a Party supervisor. One
time, my uncle observed that the process of preparing a batch of chemicals was
going too slowly. The factory workers would pour the raw materials into a huge
vat and then leave to sit around while the chemical reactions took place on
their own. He realized, quite simply, that each chemical ingredient was mired
in its own level, and the necessary process was going exceedingly slowly. He
called the workers back to the vat, fit them out with huge ladles, and ordered
them to stir the batch. Indeed, the process took place in much less time and
the order was ready well before it was due.
The
head of the factory called him in. My uncle was sure he would be congratulated
on his success and initiative.
“How
dare you!” the factory boss demanded,” How dare you do something like this
without clearing it with the Party attaché!”
With
all this, one may ask, how did the Soviet system function. In the early years
of collectivization, millions died of starvation as the farmers had no
incentive to raise crops. The great breadbasket of the Ukraine, for example,
became a wasteland ?
Eventually,
my father explained, there was robust, private economy. Everyone was able to
pull aside something, be it a few crops from the back yard that were much
better than those grown by the collective, or some factory goods that were
spirited out. All was available, for a price, on flourishing underground black
market economy. Capitalism succeeded under the radar of communism.
The benefit of no diploma
My
father was doing very well at the factory. The supervisor called him in.” Tell
me, Wilgelm Samulovich, how is it that you are so successful. You produce one
new innovation after another. What’s your secret?”
My
father looked around at the office. There were certificates on the wall, but
not a single book on the shelf.
“Tell
me,” my father replied,” Where are you
chemistry manuals and reference books?
”Manuals!
Reference books! Why on earth do I need them. I am a diplomad graduate of the
chemical engineering institute. I know
the subject, I don’t need any books!”
“
Well, you see”, my father confessed, “ I never completed any formal training.
So you see, I am constantly going back to my chemistry manuals and finding new
things that I never knew before.!”
He was
proud that even had a patent on file in Russia. I asked him what happened to
it. “The Germans were making their way to Stalingrad, the lines of
communication with the agency responsible were cut, and I could not wait for it
to arrive. I headed east.”
Books Save Lives
What
was the one lesson about the value of reading that I appreciated them most and
that I repeated to my children when they were in school.
My
father , while still in the Stalingrad area, was confronted with a major
undertaking. Harvest time was coming soon and the Kolkhozy, the collective
farms, would be sending the wagons out to the fields to collect the wheat
needed to feed the hundred million plus citizens of the Soviet Union, and
especially to keep the Red Army fit enough to battle the Axis forces.
There
was one simple hitch. The wagon wheels needed to be greased; otherwise, the
wheels would not turn easily, and whether by horse or by tractor, the farmers
would not be able to collect the harvest in time before the weather changed and
the crops would be ruined. However, because of wartime priorities, all the
refined petrochemicals needed to produce the right grade of grease had been
requisitioned to the war effort. After all, tanks and bombers needed the grease
first.
The
challenge presented my father’s factory was to produce a reasonable grade of
wagon grease with the residue from the refineries in the area that were no good
for anything else.
My
father was up to the challenge, found the ingredients, prepared the batch, and
the factory began production. The grease was placed into containers ready to be
shipped.
Then,
the worst happened; some chemical reaction had gone wrong and the grease began
to bubble over. The grease would soon be completely useless. My father was in a
panic.
He
communicated with chemists in the area and as far as Moscow. No one could come
up with a solution, and, in their fashion, they bade him farewell, because,
simply, in this, failure was not an option.
My
father was sure that at any moment, the NKVD would be pounding on the door, to
cart him off to Siberian Gulag, at best, and possible execution as an enemy of
the people.
He did
what his natural inclination told him; go to the library and read a book.
At the
library, out of sheer curiosity, he pulled out a book on pharmaceuticals, and
thumbed through it. He land on a page of remedies for stomach gas, that called
for using activated charcoal, a common treatment still used today. Charcoal is
heated in the presence of certain gases, and tiny pores open up in the process
that increase the absorptive capacity of charcoal. Eureka!
He ran
back to the factory, gave instructions to find all sources of charcoal. The pharmaceutical
book had specified a finer quality charcoal, processed from animal bones, but
in wartime Russia, he took what he could get. Within a short while, he had
enough charcoal to place into the vats of grease and soon enough, the bubbling
subsided. The grease was saved, the wagons wheels turned, and the harvest came
in.
However,
my father knew one small secret. Because he could only use the poor supplies
and equipment on hand, the charcoal had course grains in it. Over the course of
time, these particles would grind away
at the wheels and the wheels would come to a halt. By then, however, he wasn’t
as worried. The Germans were on their way to Stalingrad and he was on his way
to Central Asia.
Moral
of the story—when in trouble, open a book about something you don’t know. It may
save your life ( and millions of others as well).
###