Six Weeks in Russia, 1919 by Arthur Ransome

Six Weeks in Russia, 1919 by Arthur Ransome

Author:Arthur Ransome [Arthur Ransome]
Language: eng
Format: epub, azw3, mobi
ISBN: 9780571287611
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Published: 2012-08-23T04:00:00+00:00


Seven / An ex-capitalist

FEBRUARY 13

I drank tea with an old acquaintance from the provinces, a Russian who, before the revolution, owned a leather-bag factory which worked in close connection with his uncle’s tannery. He gave me a short history of events at home. The uncle had started with small capital, and during the war had made enough to buy outright the tannery in which he had had shares. The story of his adventures since the October revolution is a very good illustration of the rough and ready way in which theory gets translated into practice. I am writing it, as nearly as possible, as it was told by the nephew.

During the first revolution, that is from March till October 1917, he fought hard against the workmen, and was one of the founders of a soviet of factory owners, the object of which was to defeat the efforts of the workers’ soviets.* This, of course, was smashed by the October Revolution, and ‘Uncle, after being forced, as a property owner, to pay considerable contributions, watched the newspapers closely, realised that after the nationalisation of the banks resistance was hopeless, and resigned himself to do what he could, not to lose his factory altogether.’

He called together all the workmen, and proposed that they should form an artel or co-operative society and take the factory into their own hands, each man contributing a thousand roubles towards the capital with which to run it. Of course the workmen had not got a thousand roubles apiece, ‘so uncle offered to pay it in for them, on the understanding that they would eventually pay him back.’ This was illegal, but the little town was a long way from the centre of things, and it seemed a good way out of the difficulty. He did not expect to get it back, but he hoped in this way to keep control of the tannery, which he wished to develop, having a paternal interest in it.

Things worked very well. They elected a committee of control. ‘Uncle was elected president, I was elected vice-president, and there were three workmen. We are working on those lines to this day. They give uncle 1,500 roubles a month, me a thousand and the bookkeeper a thousand. The only difficulty is that the men will treat uncle as the owner, and this may mean trouble if things go wrong; Uncle is for ever telling them, ‘It’s your factory, don’t call me Master,’ and they reply, ‘Yes, it’s our factory all right, but you are still Master, and that must be.”

Trouble came fast enough, with the tax levied on the propertied classes. ‘Uncle’, very wisely, had ceased to be a property owner. He had given up his house to the factory, and been allotted rooms in it, as president of the factory soviet. He was therefore really unable to pay when the people from the district soviet came to tell him that he had been assessed to pay a tax of 60,000 roubles. He explained the position.



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