Religion
By V. I. Lenin
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V. I. Lenin
V.I. Lenin (1870-1924) was a pivotal figure in twentieth century radical politics. He was a theoretician and the leader of the Russian Bolshevik Party. He wrote widely, authoring books such as Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism (Pluto, 1996). His selected writings were collected in the volume Revolution, Democracy, Socialism (Pluto, 2008).
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Religion - V. I. Lenin
INTRODUCTION
ATHEISM is a natural and inseparable part of Marxism, of the theory and practice of scientific socialism. In accordance with their fundamental philosophical outlook, Marx and Engels always called themselves Materialists.
In developing their materialist philosophy, Marx and Engels had at first thoroughly to analyse the ideas which came from the religious world of thought. As early as 1844, Marx coined the phrase: The criticism of religion is the beginning of all criticism.
This analysis was accomplished with such completeness that later the atheistic character of their mature philosophy seemed to require little emphasis and was taken for granted. The same is true of many Marxists and not least of Lenin. It is not an accident therefore, that the works of our great masters, Marx, Engels and Lenin, contain no complete and systematic statement of their proletarian Atheism. It is not usual to talk of obvious facts.
This also explains why atheism has played such a small part in the labour movement generally. In the early days of the labour movement the mass of the workers turned away from religion. In 1874, Engels wrote: Atheism is practically an accepted fact among European labour parties.
Lenin, in 1909, spoke in a similar strain of class-conscious Social-Democrats, who are of course atheists.
Later on however, this sturdy secularism of the labour movement began to deteriorate and the Social-Democratic parties, in their effort to win the support of the petty-bourgeoisie, began to pander to the religious prejudices of the latter.
While the first programme of the Social-Democrats of Germany (the Eisenach programme of 1869) clearly and correctly stated the demand for the separation of Church from State, and School from the Church, the Gotha programme of the Socialist Labour Party (1875) contained the formulation: Religion is declared a private matter.
This opened wide the door to the opportunists. In his commentary on this programme, Marx wrote that the workers’ party should try rather to liberate the conscience from the spectre of religion,
and added wrathfully: But they don’t think it proper to overstep the bourgeois mark.
The German Social-Democratic Party kept to the same idea in its Erfurt programme of 1891. Point 6 of that programme runs: Ecclesiastical and religious bodies are to be considered as private associations.
Engels had previously recommended the formula: "All religious bodies without exception are to be treated by the State as private associations. They are not to receive support from public funds or exercise any influence over public education." The Social-Democratic Party ignored Engels’ recommendation and even withheld it from the party membership until October, 1901.
In practice the point as adopted by the Party was interpreted as meaning: religion is a private affair; that is to say, that it was not the concern of the Party as to whether a member was religious or not. This applied to the Social-Democratic Parties in other countries as well, with the result that the idea gained ground among the Social-Democrats that Marxism was not anti-religious. Moreover, various sections of the socialist movement arose which claimed to derive their socialist principles from religion. For example, the leaders of the Socialist Party of America, the Independent Labour Party in England, etc. Thus the very principles of socialism were converted by the opportunists into a means of fostering religious superstitions among the workers. Since the war, Social-Democracy has avowedly and definitely repudiated Marxism and has taken a religious turn. It is necessary therefore to re-state the attitude of the Communists towards religion. This attitude is well explained in the collection of articles by Lenin on this subject contained in this small volume. From these the reader will also obtain Lenin’s view on how to counteract the religious doping of the workers.
The collection here given contains the most important articles and letters written by Lenin on the questions of religion in the period between 1902 and 1922. It should be remarked that in his comprehensive work, Materialism and Empirico-Criticism,* written in 1908, Lenin analysed the idealist philosophy which fosters religious views and in so doing dealt thoroughly with dialectical materialism.
The first two articles (written in 1905 and 1909 respectively) represent the most complete statement which we possess by any leading Marxist on the attitude of the modern working-class movement to religion. The third article, like the second, deals with the debate on religion in the Tsarist Duma (1909), and pays special attention to the feeble and reactionary attitude of the liberal bourgeoisie to the reactionary church. The fourth article was written in 1902 on the occasion of a dispute between orthodox believers and a liberal-minded member of the aristocracy which elicited a valuable admission from the faithful, as to what is the good of religion.
The necessity for unceasing struggle on behalf of atheism within and outside the party was emphasised by Lenin in the article which he wrote as an introduction to the first number of the scientific Bolshevik journal, Under the Banner of Marxism (1922), and which we have reprinted as the fifth in this series. We should note, in this, the demand for a united front of all consistent atheists and materialists. The article on Tolstoy (1908) will come as something of a shock to the intellectuals of Western Europe, familiar as they are with books about Tolstoy, since it says in a few sentences what all those thick volumes left unsaid. Proceeding from his basis of historical materialism Lenin goes to the very root of the religious ideas on which Tolstoyanism is founded and at the same time analyses the revolutionary importance of the peasantry.
The two letters from Lenin to Maxim Gorky, written in 1913, are a valuable part of this collection. The letters are directed against the revival of an emotional