Alexander Parvus

(Redirected from Parvus Helphand)

Alexander Lvovich Parvus, born Israel Lazarevich Gelfand (8 September 1867 – 12 December 1924) and sometimes called Helphand in the literature on the Russian Revolution, was a Marxist theoretician, publicist, and controversial activist in the Social Democratic Party of Germany.

Alexander Parvus
Alexander Parvus in 1905
Born
Israel Lazarevich Gelfand

(1867-09-08)8 September 1867
Died12 December 1924(1924-12-12) (aged 57)
NationalityRussian

Biography

edit

Early life

edit

Israel Lazarevich Gelfand was born to a Lithuanian Jewish family on 8 September 1867 in the shtetl of Berazino in the Russian Empire, (in present-day Belarus). Although little is known of Israel's early childhood, the Gelfand family belonged to the lower-middle class, with his father working as an artisan of some sort — perhaps as a locksmith or as a blacksmith.[1] When Israel was a small boy, a fire damaged the family's home in Berazino, prompting a move to the city of Odessa, Russian Empire, (present-day Ukraine), the hometown of Israel's paternal grandfather.[2]

Gelfand attended gymnasium in Odessa and received private tutoring in the humanities.[3] He also read widely on his own, including material by the iconic Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko, the journalist Nikolai Mikhailovsky, and the political satirist Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin, which led the young Gelfand to begin to question the legitimacy of the Tsarist Empire.[4]

Revolutionary

edit

In 1886, the 19-year-old Gelfand first travelled from Russia to Basel, Switzerland.[5] It was there that Gelfand was first exposed to the writings of Alexander Herzen as well as the revolutionary literature of the day.[6] He returned to Russia briefly the following year but he became the subject of official scrutiny by the tsarist secret police and was forced to leave the country again for his safety.[7] He would remain abroad for more than a decade.[7]

Returning to Switzerland, in the autumn of 1888 Gelfand enrolled at the University of Basel, where he studied political economy.[8] Gelfand would remain at the university for the next three years, graduating with a doctorate degree in July 1891.[9] Gelfand's professors were largely hostile to his Marxist approach to economics, however, and difficulty in his oral examination resulted in a rider being attached to the degree which rendered it the equivalent of a third class degree.[9]

Gelfand chose not to pursue an academic career but rather sought to begin a political career which would both provide him financial support and serve the cause of socialism.[10] Alienated from the backwardness of agrarian Russia and the limited political horizons there, Gelfand moved to Dresden, in Germany, joined the Social Democratic Party and took over the editorship of the socialist newspaper Sächsische Arbeiterzeitung. He enlisted the German revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg as a contributor.

From 28 January to 6 March 1898, Parvus used his newspaper to run a series of polemical articles attacking the German Marxist Eduard Bernstein, who had queried Marx's prediction that the collapse of capitalism was inevitable, and advocated a non-violent reforms as the route to socialism. Giving his series the title 'Bernstein's Overthrow of Socialism', he attacked Bernstein in personal terms, as someone who had deserted Marxism. He was in a minority within the SDP, most of whose leaders were shocked by his intemperate language, but he was backed by Rosa Luxemburg, and the leading Russian Marxist, Georgi Plekhanov.[11]

On 25 September 1898, Parvus and his assistant editor, Julian Marchlewski were expelled from Saxony, and settled in Munich, handing control of Sächsische Arbeiterzeitung to Rosa Luxemburg. In Munich, he founded the publishing house that introduced the work of Maxim Gorky to Germany. In 1900, Parvus met Vladimir Lenin for the first time, in Munich, each admiring the other's theoretical works. Parvus encouraged Lenin to begin publishing his revolutionary paper Iskra.[12]

Parvus' attempts to become a German citizen proved fruitless. He once commented in a letter to his German friend Wilhelm Liebknecht that "I am seeking a government where one can inexpensively acquire a fatherland."[13]

Russian Revolution of 1905

edit

After the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War, Parvus wrote a series of articles for Iskra, beginning in February 1904, in which he forecast the decline of the nation state as capitalist competition made states more interdependent, that there would be a series of wars as states fought, and that there would be a political upheaval in Russia that would 'shake the bourgeois world.'[14] for survival.

Shortly after Bloody Sunday, when troops fired on a peaceful crowd in Saint Petersburg, setting off the 1905 Russian Revolution, the young Leon Trotsky came with his wife to stay at Parvus's home in Munich, and showed him the manuscript of a pamphlet, to which Parvus added a preface, in which Trotsky developed Parvus's ideas, adding the possibility that revolution in Russia could bring a "workers' government" to power, contrary to the standard Marxist view that Russia would need to go through a phase after the overthrow of the monarchy in which was exercised by a government controlled by the Bourgeoisie. This was known as the theory of Permanent Revolution. Trotsky later acknowledged Parvus's influence over him. He wrote:

Parvus was unquestionably one of the most important of the Marxists at the turn of the century. He used the Marxian methods skilfully, was possessed of a wide vision, and kept a keen eye on everything of importance in world events. This, coupled with his fearless thinking and his virile muscular style, made him a remarkable writer. ... And yet there was always something made and unreliable about Parvus. In addition to all his other ambitions, this revolutionary was torn by an amazing desire to get rich.[15]

There were broad discussions on the questions of "permanent revolution" within the social democratic movement in the period leading up to 1917.[16]

In October 1905, Parvus returned to St Petersburg, where he helped Trotsky take control of the daily paper, Russkaya Gazeta, and cofounded with Trotsky and Julius Martov the daily Nachalo (The Start). Arrested in April 1906, he was visited by Rosa Luxemburg in the Peter and Paul Fortress[17] Sentenced to three years' exile in Siberia, Parvus escaped and emigrated to Germany, where he published a book about his experiences called In the Russian Bastille during the Revolution.

 
Alexander Parvus (left) with the Russian revolutionaries Leon Trotsky (centre) and Leo Deutsch (right) in prison. Seemingly a composite photograph, as shown by the peculiar ghostly hand at right.

Maxim Gorky affair

edit

Before he left for Russia, Parvus struck a deal with Maxim Gorky to produce his play The Lower Depths. According to the agreement, the majority of the play's proceeds were to go to the Russian Social Democratic Party (and approximately 25% to Gorky himself). Parvus' failure to pay (despite the fact that the play had over 500 showings) caused him to be accused of stealing 130,000 German gold marks. Gorky threatened to sue, but Rosa Luxemburg convinced Gorky to keep the quarrel inside the party's own court. Eventually, Parvus paid back Gorky, but his reputation in party circles was damaged.

Istanbul period

edit

Soon afterwards Parvus moved to Istanbul in the Ottoman Empire, where he lived for five years, from 1910 until 1914.[18] There he set up an arms trading company which profited handsomely during the Balkan War. He became the financial and political advisor of the Committee of Union and Progress. In 1912 he was made editor of Türk Yurdu, their daily newspaper. He worked closely with Enver, Talât, Cemal Pasha—and Finance Minister Cavid Bey. His firm dealt with the deliveries of foodstuffs for the Ottoman army and he was a business partner of the Krupp concern, of Vickers Limited, and of the famous arms dealer Basil Zaharov.[19] Arms dealings with Vickers Limited at war time gave basis to the theory that Alexander Parvus was also a British intelligence asset.

During his Istanbul period, Parvus also cooperated with the pro-CUP Zionist newspaper Le Jeune Turc, whose editor-in-chief was Ze'ev Jabotinsky.

Soviet relations

edit

Russian Revolution

edit

While in the Ottoman Empire, Parvus became close with German ambassador Hans Freiherr von Wangenheim who was known to be partial to establishing revolutionary fifth columns among the allies. Consequently, Parvus offered his plan via Baron von Wangenheim to the German General Staff: the paralyzing of Russia via general strike, financed by the German government[20] (which, at the time, was at war with Russia and its allies). Von Wangenheim sent Parvus to Berlin where the latter arrived on the 6 March 1915 and presented a 20-page plan titled A preparation of massive political strikes in Russia to the German government.[21]

Copenhagen operation

edit

Some accuse Parvus of having funded Lenin while in Switzerland. Other authors, however, are skeptical. Scharlau and Zeman conclude in their biography of Parvus that there was no cooperation between the two, declaring that "Lenin refused the German offer of aid." Parvus's bank account shows that he only paid out a total of 25,600 francs in the period between his arrival in Switzerland in May 1915 and the February Revolution of 1917. Parvus did little in Switzerland, Alfred Erich Senn concludes.[22] Austrian intelligence thought Parvus gave money to Russian emigres' newspapers in Paris. However, in the beginning of 1915 the sources of funding became clearer to Lenin and the other Paris emigrés, whereupon they rejected further support. Harold Shukman concluded, "funds were plainly not flowing into Lenin's hands" [23]

Parvus placed his bets on Lenin, as the latter was not only a radical but willing to accept the sponsorship of the Tsar's wartime enemy, Germany. The two met in Bern in May 1915 and agreed to collaboration through their organizations, though Lenin remained very careful never to get associated with Parvus in public. There is no certain proof that they ever met face to face again, although there are indications that such a meeting may well have occurred on 13 April 1917, during Lenin's stop-over in Stockholm.[24]

Parvus assiduously worked at keeping Lenin's confidence. However, Lenin kept him at arm's length to disguise the changing roles of both men, Parvus' involvement with German intelligence and his own liaisons with his old ally, who was not respected any more among the socialists after his years in Turkey and after becoming a millionaire entrepreneur.[25] German intelligence set up Parvus' financial network via offshore operations in Copenhagen, setting up relays for German money to get to Russia via fake financial transactions between front organizations. A large part of the transactions of these companies were genuine, but those served to bury the transfer of money to the Bolsheviks, a strategy made feasible by the weak and overburdened fiscal and customs offices in Scandinavia, which were inadequate for the booming black market in these countries during the war.

It is still debated whether the money with which this financial network operated was actually of German origin. The evidence published by Alexander Kerensky's Government in preparation for a trial scheduled for October (November) 1917 was recently reexamined and found to be either inconclusive or outright forgery.[26] (See also Sisson Documents)

Leon Trotsky responded to allegations that Lenin had colluded with Parvus or German intelligence in his return to St Petersburg[27] in his History of the Russian Revolution.[28][29]

Death

edit

Parvus died in Berlin on 12 December 1924. His body was cremated and interred in a Berlin cemetery. After his death, Konrad Haenisch wrote in his memoir: "This man possessed the ablest brains of the Second International".[30]

During his lifetime, Alexander Parvus' reputation among his revolutionary peers suffered as a result of the Maxim Gorky affair (see above) and the fact that he was in effect a German government agent. At the same time both his business skills and revolutionary ideas were appreciated and relied upon by Russian and German revolutionaries and Ottoman's Young Turks. After the October Revolution in Russia for obvious political reasons his role was denied and he himself vilified. This continued during Joseph Stalin's era and sometimes had anti-semitic overtones to it. In Germany however he was considered favorably.[clarification needed][20] His name is often used in modern political debates in Russia.[19]

Family

edit

Parvus left no documents after his death and all of his savings disappeared. He was married at least three times. In 1906, Rosa Luxemburg wrote Karl Kautsky saying: "Wife number three is here in St Petersburg" - just after his second wife had fled an anti-semitic Pogrom in Odessa, and had arrived in Warsaw, destitute.[31] One of his wives, Tatiana Berman, was born in Odessa in 1868 and died there in 1917, aged 49. [32] Their son, Yevgeny (Gnedin), was born in Dresden in 1898.

Although the Soviet authorities refused to allow Parvus to return to Russia, both his surviving sons, Yevgeny Gnedin and Leon Helfand, were allowed to settle in the USSR, and became Soviet diplomats. Yevgeny Gnedin was head of the press department at the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, at the time of his arrest on 11 May 1939, which coincided with the dismissal of the foreign minister, Maxim Litvinov. He refused to confess, despite being tortured by the police chief, Lavrentiy Beria and his deputy, Bogdan Kobulov.[33] He survived years in the Gulag, and wrote memoirs "Catastrophe and Rebirth" and in "Exit from the Labyrinth" describing his experience. [34] He died in 1983.[35]

edit

He was portrayed by English actor Michael Gough in the 1974 BBC mini-series Fall of Eagles, covering the history of the pre-World War I period. Günter Lamprecht played the title role in the West German TV film Ein Mann namens Parvus (1984). In 1988 Parvus was portrayed by English actor Timothy West in the film Lenin...The Train. A fictionalized version of him as a German Zionist mastermind behind the new world order is portrayed by the Armenian Actor Kevork Malikyan in the 2017 Turkish TV series Payitaht: Abdülhamid about the struggles and intelligence of the Ottoman Sultan in keeping the declining empire together.

See also

edit

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ Z.A.B. Zeman and W.B. Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution: The Life of Alexander Israel Helphand (Parvus), 1867-1924. London: Oxford University Press, 1965; pg. 8.
  2. ^ Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pg. 9.
  3. ^ Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pg. 10.
  4. ^ Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pp. 10-11.
  5. ^ Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pp. 11 and 16.
  6. ^ Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pg. 12.
  7. ^ a b Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pg. 14.
  8. ^ Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pg. 16.
  9. ^ a b Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pg. 18.
  10. ^ Zeman and Scharlau, The Merchant of Revolution, pg. 19.
  11. ^ Nettl, J.P. (1966). Rosa Luxemburg, volume 1. London: Oxford U.P. pp. 147–155.
  12. ^ "Александр Парвус (Израиль Гельфанд)," Khronos, Accessed September 27, 2009.
  13. ^ L. Shub, "Kupets revoliutsii" (Merchant of the Revolution), Novyi zhurnal [New York], vol. 87 (1967), page 296. Cited in "Александр Парвус (Израиль Гельфанд)," Khronos, Accessed September 27, 2009.
  14. ^ Deutscher, Isaac (1954). The Prophet Armed, Trotsky:1879-1921. London: Oxford U.P. pp. 103–04.
  15. ^ Trotsky, Leon (1975). My Life: An Attempt at an Autobiography. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin. p. 172.
  16. ^ Day, Richard B.; Gaido, Daniel (2011). Witnesses to Permanent Revolution: The Documentary Record. Haymarket Books. ISBN 978-1608460892.
  17. ^ Pietro Zveteremich, Il grande Parvus, Milan, Garzanti, 1988, p. 117
  18. ^ Karaömerlioglu, Asim (November 2004). ""Helphand-Parvus and his impact on Turkish intellectual life"". Vol. 40, No. 6, pages 145-165. Middle Eastern Studies. Archived from the original on 2013-01-28. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
  19. ^ a b Галковский, Дмитрий (June 22, 2005). "Березовский – между Азефом и Парвусом (Berezovsky – between Azef and Parvus)" (in Russian). Деловая газета «Взгляд». Archived from the original on 31 December 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
  20. ^ a b Schurer, Heinz (October 1959). "Alexander Helphand-Parvus—Russian Revolutionary and German Patriot". Russian Review. 18 (4): 313–331. doi:10.2307/126174. JSTOR 126174.
  21. ^ Парвус, Александр (February 1915). "Подготовка массовой политической забастовки в России (A preparation of massive political strikes in Russia)" (in Russian). ХРОНОС. Retrieved 2006-12-17.
  22. ^ Senn, Alfred Erich (1976). "The Myth of German Money during the First World War". Soviet Studies. 28 (1): 83–90. doi:10.1080/09668137608411043. JSTOR 150283.
  23. ^ Harold Shukman, Lenin and the Russian Revolution, Putnam Pub Group, 1967
  24. ^ Hans Björkegren, Ryska posten: de ryska revolutionärerna i Norden 1906-1917 (in Swedish), 1985, Bonnier Fakta, Stockholm; we know that Parvus sent a number of messages to Lenin that day and tried to coax a meeting, and some sources suggest that such an encounter did in fact happen before Lenin went north and home
  25. ^ Michael Pearson, The Sealed Train, London, 1975, ch.4
  26. ^ Semion Lyandres Archived 2006-10-30 at the Wayback Machine The Bolsheviks' "German Gold" Revisited: An Inquiry into the 1917 Accusations
  27. ^ (in German)Pößneck, Ehrenfried Lenin als Kontrahent von Parvus im Jahr 1917. Schkeuditz : GNN-Verlag, 1997. ISBN 3-932725-05-0; D. Stove, The question about Parvus (1991).
  28. ^ Peter Schwarz: Der Spiegel churns out old lies on the October Revolution Retrieved 2015-08-07.
  29. ^ Trotsky, Leon (1930). "The Month of the Great Slander". Retrieved 26 July 2023.
  30. ^ Haenisch, Konrad: Parvus: Ein Blatt der Erinnerung. Berlin, Verlag für Sozialwissenschaft, 1925 (in German).
  31. ^ Nettl. Rosa Luxemburg. p. 356.
  32. ^ "Tatiana Naumovna Berman public profile". GENi. 1868. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  33. ^ Gnedin, Evgeny. "Письмо Е.Гнедина в Президиум ЦК КПСС. 16 июля 1953 г." Исторические Материалы. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  34. ^ Cohen, Stephen F. (1993). The Afterlife of Nikolai Bukharin. London: (Introduction to 'This I cannot Forget' by Anna Larina) Pandora. ISBN 0-393-03025-3.
  35. ^ "Evgeny Alexandrovich Gnedin public profile". GENi. 29 November 1898. Retrieved 11 July 2022.

Further reading

edit
edit