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Lenin to Stalin

Lenin to Stalin. Ms. Burke March 15, 2006. Bolsheviks in Power. Lenin orders all farmland to be distributed among the peasants and gave control of the factories to the workers. Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. The Bolsheviks sign the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany

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Lenin to Stalin

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  1. Lenin to Stalin Ms. Burke March 15, 2006

  2. Bolsheviks in Power • Lenin orders all farmland to be distributed among the peasants and gave control of the factories to the workers

  3. Treaty of Brest-Litovsk • The Bolsheviks sign the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany • Russia had to surrender a large chunk of territory to Germany • The land contained a large portion of Russia’s population and industry. • The terms of the treaty caused widespread anger

  4. Civil War • The Bolshevik opponents form the White Army • Leon Trotsky commanded the Bolshevik Red Army • Around 15 million Russians died in the civil war from 1918-1920 • The Red Army won

  5. Lenin’s Economic Reforms • War and revolution destroyed the Russian economy • Lenin launched the New Economic Policy or NEP • Lenin put aside his idea for a state-controlled economy and resorted to a small scale version of capitalism. • The government still kept control of major industries and banks

  6. Lenin’s Political Reforms • Lenin organized Russia into several self-governing republics under the central gov’t • The country was named the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) • Bolsheviks renamed their party the Communist Party • They created a constitution based on socialist and democratic principles, but the Communist part had total control

  7. v. • Trotsky (right) was a firm Marxist who wanted support for a worldwide revolution against capitalism • Stalin (left) wanted to work on socialist views in Russia first • Stalin put his supporters into top jobs and isolated Trotsky in his own party

  8. Stalin v. Trotsky cont… • Trotsky was stripped of party membership and fled into exile in 1929 • He was later murdered in Mexico by an agent working for Stalin

  9. Stalin becomes Dictator • Stalin was cold, hard and impersonal • After forcing Trotsky out Stalin focused on Russia’s development • He used the phrase “socialism in one country” to describe his aims of perfecting a Communist state

  10. Stalin’s Totalitarian State • Stalin transformed Russia into a Totalitarian state • Totalitarianism described a gov’t that takes total, centralized state control over every aspect of public and private life • Totalitarian leaders appear to provide a sense of security and give direction for the future

  11. Stalin’s Economic Reforms • Lenin’s NEP was a mixture of free enterprise and state control • Stalin’s economic policy called for total state control • He called for a command economy, which is a system where the government makes all economic decisions

  12. USSR’s Industrial Revolution • In 1928, Stalin outlined the 1st of many five-year plans for development of the USSR’s economy • The five-year plans set unrealistic quotas to increase the output of steel, coal, oil, and electricity

  13. USSR’s Industrial Revolution cont… • To try and reach these unrealistic quotas, the gov’t limited consumer production • People faced shortages of housing, food, clothing and other goods • The gov’t controlled every aspect of the worker’s life, which took a toll on peoples personal lives • From 1928-1937, industrial production increased by 25%

  14. Agricultural Revolution • In 1925, the gov’t seized 25 million privately owned farms • The gov’t combined them into collective farms • Peasants resisted the gov’t and Stalin used terror and violence to force the peasants to work

  15. Agricultural Revolution • The kulaks, a wealthy class of peasants, resisted heavily and the gov’t executed them or sent them into exile • By 1938, more then 90% of peasants lived on collective farms and agricultural production was twice what it had been in 1928

  16. Weapons of Totalitarianism • Police Terror • Dictators of totalitarian states uses terror and violence to force obedience • Monitored telephone lines, read mail, planted informers Lavrent Beria (right): head of secret police

  17. Weapons of Totalitarianism • In 1934, Stalin launched the Great Purge, a campaign of terror that was directed at eliminating anyone who threatened his power • When the Great Purge ended in 1939, Stalin gained total control of both the Soviet government and the Communist Party

  18. Weapons of Totalitarianism 2) Indoctrination and Propaganda • Totalitarian states rely on indoctrination or instruction on the govt’s set of beliefs, to mold people’s minds • Party leaders lectured workers and peasants on the ideals of communism • The State supported youth groups and used them as training grounds for future party members

  19. Weapons of Totalitarianism • Soviet newspapers and radio broadcasts glorified the achievements of Communism and Stalin • Soviet Realism was an artistic styles that praised Soviet way of life

  20. Weapons of Totalitarianism 3) Censorship • Stalin would not tolerate individual creativity that threatened conformity • Gov’t controlled all newspapers, motion pictures, radio and other sources of information

  21. Weapons of Totalitarianism 4) Religious Persecution • Communists aimed to replace religious teachings with the ideals of Communism • The Russian Orthodox Church was the main target of persecution • Roman Catholics and Jews were also persecuted

  22. Daily Life for Women Under Stalin • With the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, women won equal rights • Women had new educational opportunities, but were still responsible for their household duties • Women were supposed to provide the state with future generations of obedient citizens

  23. Education • The government controlled all education from nursery school to the university • School children learned the virtues of the Communist Party • They party also set up youth programs called Komsomols

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