File:Russian Rev Outline Handout.pdf
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Russian Revolution Lesson Group Project Outline to Handout to class with Cathy's part censored
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Civil War in Russia, Lenin Restores Order, and Totalitarianism in Russia: Joseph Stalin
Cathy's Part Censored
- Leader V.I. Lenin died in 1924 launching power struggle to see who would be the next leader
- Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin were the two rivals competing for the top position.
- Both had helped in the revolution and in creating a Soviet state
- The winner in this struggle was Joseph Stalin – was cold and ruthless
- Stalin exiled Leon Trotsky in 1829
- Stalin was now a dictator with absolute power
- Global Focus
- Stalin was focused on Russia, unlike Lenin and Trotsky who focused on a worldwide Communist Revolution
- Stalin aimed to perfect “Socialism in one country” and turned it into a totalitarian state
- Totalitarianism
- Where the government takes complete, central control over every aspect of public and private life
- Leaders such a Stalin appear to provide a sense of security and direction for the future
- It challenges the basic values of democratic states and the thoughts of the Enlightenment -reason, freedom, human dignity, and the worth of the individual
- Police State
- Not even the slightest bit of dissent was allowed, before the secret police arrested you
- You could be arrested for anything, at anytime.
- If there was even the slightest suspicion you were planning to overthrow the government-Gone!
- If you or your factory failed to meet your quota, Bye, bye
- If you were a police man and didn’t arrest enough criminals, you should be afraid of the knock on your door
- Stalin arrested almost every Bolsheviks who participated in the revolution as well as almost every leader in Stalin’s government for “crimes against the Soviet state” - Great Purge
- By now Stalin had complete control of the USSR
- However, at the cost of 8 to 13 million deaths
- Stalin became more powerful any of the previous Russia czars
- Propaganda
- Stalin (and totalitarian governments) used Propaganda to spread their ideas
- Peasants were taught the ideals of communism
- Youth-groups “brainwashed” kids
- Sponsored socialist realism art
- Smiling workers doing their part
- Total Censorship of Media
- Religious Persecution
- State encouraged (um, demanded) atheism
- Museums showing fallacy of religion
- Police destroyed churches and synagogues
- Persecuted religious leaders
- But people still clung to their faiths
- Russian Orthodox Church = major religion
- Command Economy
- Stalin changed Lenin’s NEP to an economy where the state had complete control
- Political leaders identified economic needs and found ways to fulfilled them
- Stalin also wanted to catch up to Great Britain and Germany, as well as the rest of Europe, in industrialization
- Unlike democratic economic change, Stalin pushed this along at great costs to individuals
- Stalin changed Lenin’s NEP to an economy where the state had complete control
- First Five Year Plan - 1928
- The government would take drastic steps promote rapid industrial growth and strengthen military defenses (remember just lost WWI)
- Set impossibly high quotas (or numeric goals) for the output of steel, coal, oil, and electricity
- Workers Poor Lives
- The government controlled every aspect of worker’s lives
- Government chose the jobs, the hours you worked
- Food and supply shortages from rapid industrialization
- The Secret Police enforced all there rules
- Ready to imprison anyone for breaking them
- This forced labor had a gigantic toll on Soviet families and lives
- The Agriculture Revolution
- The Agriculture Revolution was very successful, but far more brutal
- In 1928, Stalin began to seize 25 million private farms and combine them into huge collective farms. Peasants worked on these farms.
- The Agriculture Revolution - Revolution
- The Peasants were angry because they had just won their land from the nobles.
- They revolted fiercely by destroying crops and livestock
- Stalin struck back with his secret police sending peasants to work at the threat of death
- Between 5 and 10 million peasants were killed with millions more sent to Siberia.
- The kulaks, wealthy peasants also revolted and their entire class was sent to death or work camps
- Success! - By 1938, 90% of peasants were now working on collective farms.
- In 10 years:
- Wheat production was doubled due to collective farming
- Electricity production was up 800%
- Steel production increased from 4 to 18 million metric tons
- The USSR was becoming a major industrial power
- In the Long Run
- Stalin responsible for Russia’s industrialization
- Russia was able to stand up to Germany in WWII
- Standards of living ultimately rose; people embraced science and technology
- Stalin changed Russia from an agricultural backwater into a world-power industrial giant
- But the people paid the price for these gains
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