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Occupy Wall Street

Occupy Wall Street and Old Russian Joke

This is a pro-Bolshevik view of the 1917 revolution :The Tsar, the Priest and the Rich Man on the Shoulders of the Labouring People, coloured lithograph by A. Apsit, 1918.

Here is a photograph depicting a street protest:


Street demonstration, Petrograd, 18 June 1917. The banner in the foreground reads "Down With The 10 Capitalist Ministers/ All Power To The Soviets Of Workers', Soldiers', And Peasants' Deputies/ And To The Socialist Ministers/ [We Demand That Nicholas II Be Transfered To The Peter-Paul Fortress."

It is 1917 a granddaughter of Decabrist (old revolutionary – see ‘”Decabrist Conspiracy” below) sits at her home and suddenly hears about unrest on the street. She asks her aid Anushka to go and check what is happening.

When Anushka comes back she gladly proclaims: “Lady, there is a revolution!!!!”

Lady: “Oh that is great, my grandfather wanted a revolution! What do they want? What do they desire to change?”

Anushka proclaims in happy and excited voice :”Lady, they want to get rid of the Czar, and they want to get rid of all these rich people, so there is going to be no more of them!!!!”

Lady becomes really sad and utters: “That is disappointing, my grandfather dreamed to make sure that there are no more poor people”


America, 2011

 


America, 2011

Decabrist Conspiracy

Huge parts of Siberia’s history are associated with the Decabrists. In December 1825, Russia’s metropolis St. Petersburg had an incredible revolt organized by parts of the aristocracy and army against the autocracy of the czar and against peonage. In November 1825 czar Alexander I suddenly died. Till the coronation of the new czar Nikolaj I a vacuum of political power developed. His older brother cut out the throne. At the day of coronation the rebels wanted to use this vacuum to bring down Nikolajs I. Ideas of the French revolution influenced many Russians to change the antiquated Russian circumstances. Before, these revolutionaries fought against Napoleon and pursued him to France, where they got in contact with the ideas of the French revolution. Within the Russian elite different secret alliances had been founded with the aim to bring down the czar, abolish peonage and change the country into a republic. On December, 14th, they put their plans into action and went down in history as Decabrists, named after “dekabr” (English – December). Unfortunately the revolt was organized very bad. The czar was already informed when a group of 2000 men met. His guards were ready to surround the rebels.

In the afternoon the revolt had been put down bloodily and many people had been arrested. The revolt of the Decabrists was the first revolutionary movement in Russia. Czar Nikolaj I had no mercy with them. It was a revolt with far-reaching political demands, so Nikolaj had to show his power. A number of 579 persons were called to account as relatives of the nasty society, 131 were judged by the court of St. Petersburg. Five leaders of the movement – Kondratij Ryleev, Pavel Pestel’, Sergej Murav’ev-Apostel, Michail Bestueev-Rjumin and Petr Kachovskij – were executed. Some death sentences were changed into forced labor. 121 members had to go to Siberia. At the same time a law was decided, that said women of exiles are regarded as widows. They could marry again without divorce. But eleven wives, among them two French women, followed their husbands to Siberia and annoyed the czar once more. These women became the real heroines of history, because they put up with loss of their state and possession.

Beyond, they had to accept that their children, born in Siberia, are serfs of the state of Russia. In 1826, deportation took place. Silver mines of Nercinsk and Akataj east of lake Baikal were the first destination for the Decabrists. The following year they were transfer to the prison of the fortress Cita, where they influenced the planning of the city very strongly. The next stop was Petrovskij Zavod. Countless petitions and obedience to warders in prison resulted in the possibility to have a certain influence on the choice of the exile. Usually they wanted to go to Irkutsk and its neighborhood. Prince Sergej Trubeckoj (1790-1860) was one of the founders of the first secret alliance “union of rescue”. He was one of the thinkers of the revolt and at the same time author of the manifest of the Decabrists. If the revolt would have been successful he should have been temporarily the leader of the state. His death sentence was changed into forced labor for life, because he didn’t take part in any armed conflict. His wife Ekatarina Trubeckaja (1800-1854) followed her husband as the first of all wives. After 20 years in different cities and mines they got the permission to move to Irkutsk. Prince Sergej Volkonskij (1788-1865) descended from an old Russian nobility. At first he also should have been killed, but later he was amnestied to 20 years of forced labor. His wife Maria Volkonskaja (1805-1863) was the granddaughter of the scientist Michail Lomonosov. She followed her husband against the will of her family. Between these two families a close friendship developed. It was forbidden for exiles to join public life. That’s why they took the public life home. Their houses became centers of high standing in the society of Irkutsk. They organized meetings, readings, concerts and theatrical performances.Thirty years later, Czar Alexander I amnestied the Decabrists in 1856. Sixteen of Nineteen Decabrists, who were still alive returned to European Russia. But admittance to Moscow and St. Petersburg was refused to them by Alexander I. The Decabrists became the epitome of the spirit of freedom towards czaristic absolutism.

http://www.geo.tu-freiberg.de


 

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