Rosa Luxemburg versus the Leninists

Jörn Schütrumpf

Rosa Luxemburg

10 November, 2023

First published at Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung.

In the months leading up to World War I, Rosa Luxemburg and Vladimir Lenin were not quarrelling over the national question, but something different altogether. What their struggle really entailed can be seen in Lenin’s third charge against her, that “she was mistaken in July 1914, when, together with Plekhanov, Vandervelde, Kautsky and others, she advocated unity between the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks”. Aside from the claim that Luxemburg was mistaken, Lenin was correct here. However, he was wrong to say that the dispute first emerged in July 1914. In fact, it had raged since 1906, and escalated between 1910 and 1913.

Rosa Luxemburg officially and publicly broke with Lenin in the midst of this dispute. She announced the break in Polish, however, and it thus went largely unnoticed in Western Europe. That said, even had the news of their  disagreement reached the West, it probably would not have interested anyone, as the Left in Western Europe had grown tired of the quarrels in Russian Social Democracy, which, since 1906, also included Luxemburg’s party, the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL). Many viewed the RSDLP as a group of immature Russians unable to achieve anything beyond accusing each other of incompetence and treason.

Lenin was certainly no stranger in Western Europe before 1917, either. Yet unlike Leon Trotsky, for instance, he was not exactly a magnet for expressions of sympathy, but somebody who, when it came to disagreements with others, would often “make it personal”, resorting to insults and rants to cover up his lack of reflection. With the possible exception of Clara Zetkin, the Secretary of the International Socialist Women’s Movement, those who knew him personally did not find much, if anything, of interest in him.

Published here in English for the first time with a foreword and annotations from Jörn Schütrumpf, “The Breakdown of Unity in the RSDLP”, an unsigned article by Rosa Luxemburg dated July 1912, was only the second time the SDKPiL publicly discussed the Bolsheviks and Lenin in particular. The leaders of the SDKPiL had by and large refrained from criticizing the Bolsheviks, as they viewed them as natural, albeit unpredictable, allies. By making this nearly forgotten text available to an international audience, we hope to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of Luxemburg’s politics, her oftentimes fraught relationship with her Russian comrades, and the global networks that made up the classical socialist movement.

Download a PDF of the interview by clicking the link below.

Rosa Luxemburg

Lenin

Rosa Luxemburg versus the Leninists | Links

Marxist theory

Rosa Luxemburg: The Breakdown of Unity in the RSDLP1.58 MB

Popular posts

What’s popular on links.org.au

Ukrainian letter of solidarity with Palestinian people

Turkey: Erdogan’s 2023 neo-Ottoman imperialist agenda, from the Caucasus to the Mediterranean

Making sense of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Capitalist globalisation, transnational class exploitation and the global police state: An interview with William I. Robinson

Poetry for a Free Palestine

US-China rivalry, ‘antagonistic cooperation’ and anti-imperialism in the 21st century: Interview with Promise LiSearch  Search

Trending topics

Trending topics on links.org.au

Middle East

Ukraine

Palestine

Rojava

Armenia

Azerbaijan

Nagorno-Karabakh

Gaza

Latest posts

The latest posts on links.org.au

Discussing Latin America’s left and solidarity with Palestine: Interview with Duran Kalkan (Kurdistan Democratic Communities Union)

‘The roots of the reactionary bloc lie in the supposed “democratic” camp’: Interview with the Slovak collective Karmína

Rosa Luxemburg versus the Leninists

Israel-Palestine conflict: Why India must stand with Palestine

Imperial designs: The United States and Israel’s war on Gaza

Stop the deportations: Solidarity statement with Afghans in Pakistan

LINKS – International Journal of Socialist Renewal is a journal for a post-Cold War left. It is a journal that rejects the Stalinist distortion of the socialist project; takes into account ecological questions; is committed to taking steps to bring together the forces for socialism in the world today; a journal that aspires to unite Marxists from different political traditions because it discusses openly and constructively.

© 2023, LINKS – International Journal of Socialist Renewal. All rights reserved.

Leave a comment